4.6 Article

Association of pancreatic polypeptide with mild cognitive impairment varies by APOE e4 allele

Journal

FRONTIERS IN AGING NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2015.00172

Keywords

cognition; mild cognitive impairment; case control study; pancreatic polypeptide; neuropeptide; type 2 diabetes; apolipoprotein E

Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging [U01 AG006786, P50 AG016574]
  2. Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research
  3. Rochester Epidemiology Project [R01 AG034676]

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We conducted a preliminary case control investigation of the association of pancreatic polypeptide (PP) with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in 202 MCI cases (mean age, 81.6 years) and 202 age- and sex-matched cognitively normal controls in the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging. Plasma PP was measured and examined as the natural logarithm (continuous) and dichotomized at the median. The OR (95% Cl) of MCI increased with increasing PP [1.46 (1.04-2.05)]. There was a negative interaction of PP with apolipoprotein E (APOE) c4 allele; compared to the reference group (no APOE c4 allele and low PP), the OR (95% Cl) for combinations of c4 and PP were: 2.64 (1.39-5.04) for APOE E4 plus low PP; 2.09 (1.27-3.45) for no APOE E4 plus high PP; and 1.91 (1.04-3.53) for no APOE c4 plus high PP (P for interaction = 0.017). There was also a trend toward a negative interaction with type 2 diabetes (P for interaction = 0.058). Compared to no diabetes and low PP, the OR (95% Cl) was 3.02 (1.22-7.46) for low PP plus diabetes but 1.80 (1.01-3.22) for high PP plus diabetes. Participants with high PP had a greater mean (SD) weight loss (kilograms per decade) than persons with low PP [-2.27 (4.07) vs. 1.61(5.24); P = 0.016]. MCI cases had a non-significantly greater weight loss per decade compared to controls. These findings suggest that high PP alone or jointly with APOE c4 allele or type 2 diabetes is associated with MCI, and that high PP may mitigate some effects of APOE c4 allele and type 2 diabetes on cognition. Potential mechanisms may involve PP-related weight loss and centrally mediated effects of PP on cognition. These findings remain to be validated in other studies.

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