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Impact of <i>APOE</i> , <i>Klotho,</i> and sex on cognitive decline with aging

Kengo Shibata, Cheng Chen, Xin You Tai, Sanjay Manohar, Masud Husain

2025Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effects of apolipoprotein E ( APOE ) and Klotho genes, both implicated in aging, on human cognition as a function of sex and age are yet to be definitively established. Here, we showed in the largest cohort studied to date ( N = 320,861) that APOE homozygous ε4 carriers had a greater decline in cognition with aging compared to ε3 carriers (ε3/ε4 and ε3/ε3) as well as smaller hippocampi and amygdala ( N = 29,510). Critically, sex and age differentially affected the decline in cognition. Younger (40 to 50 y) female homozygous ε4 carriers showed a cognitive advantage over female ε3 carriers, but this advantage was not present in males. By contrast, Klotho-VS heterozygosity did not affect cognition or brain volume, regardless of APOE genotype, sex, or age. These cognitive trajectories with aging demonstrate clear sex-dependent antagonistic pleiotropy effects of APOE ε4, but no effects of Klotho genotype on cognition and brain volume.

Topics & Concepts

KlothoApolipoprotein ECognitive declineCognitionAffect (linguistics)PsychologyAmygdalaInternal medicineBiologyEndocrinologyMedicineNeuroscienceDementiaDiseaseCommunicationKidneyParathyroid Disorders and TreatmentsCerebrovascular and Carotid Artery DiseasesFolate and B Vitamins Research