外周血DNA甲基化年龄预测阿尔茨海默病的进展、白质疾病负担和皮质萎缩。

NPJ dementia Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-27 DOI:10.1038/s44400-025-00007-1
Luke W Bonham, Daniel W Sirkis, Alina P S Pang, Leo P Sugrue, Hernando Santamaría-García, Agustín M Ibáñez, Bruce L Miller, Jennifer S Yokoyama, Michael J Corley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

横断面研究表明,由表观遗传时钟引起的加速表观遗传衰老与阿尔茨海默病(AD)病理生理或风险之间的关系有限。然而,大多数先前的分析没有使用纵向分析或AD的全脑神经成像生物标志物。在此,我们采用纵向建模和结构神经成像分析来验证加速表观遗传衰老可以预测AD进展的假设。通过生存分析,我们发现两个第二代表观遗传时钟,DNAmPhenoAge和DNAmGrimAge,预测了从认知正常衰老到轻度认知障碍或AD的进展,以及更差的纵向认知结果。表观遗传年龄也与ad相关区域的皮质变薄和白质疾病负担密切相关。因此,与早期认为基于血液的表观遗传时钟在阿尔茨海默病中适用性有限的研究相反,我们的新分析框架表明,第二代表观遗传时钟具有广泛的用途,可能代表阿尔茨海默病风险和病理生理的有希望的预测指标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

DNA methylation age from peripheral blood predicts progression to Alzheimer's disease, white matter disease burden, and cortical atrophy.

DNA methylation age from peripheral blood predicts progression to Alzheimer's disease, white matter disease burden, and cortical atrophy.

DNA methylation age from peripheral blood predicts progression to Alzheimer's disease, white matter disease burden, and cortical atrophy.

DNA methylation age from peripheral blood predicts progression to Alzheimer's disease, white matter disease burden, and cortical atrophy.

Cross-sectional studies suggest a limited relationship between accelerated epigenetic aging derived from epigenetic clocks, and Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathophysiology or risk. However, most prior analyses have not utilized longitudinal analyses or whole-brain neuroimaging biomarkers of AD. Herein, we employed longitudinal modeling and structural neuroimaging analyses to test the hypothesis that accelerated epigenetic aging would predict AD progression. Using survival analyses, we found that two second-generation epigenetic clocks, DNAmPhenoAge and DNAmGrimAge, predicted progression from cognitively normal aging to mild cognitive impairment or AD and worse longitudinal cognitive outcomes. Epigenetic age was also strongly associated with cortical thinning in AD-relevant regions and white matter disease burden. Thus, in contrast to earlier work suggesting limited applicability of blood-based epigenetic clocks in AD, our novel analytic framework suggests that second-generation epigenetic clocks have broad utility and may represent promising predictors of AD risk and pathophysiology.

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