4.3 Article

Mendelian randomization to evaluate the effect of plasma vitamin C levels on the risk of Alzheimer's disease

期刊

GENES AND NUTRITION
卷 16, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12263-021-00700-9

关键词

Alzheimer's disease; Vitamin C; Genome-wide association study; Mendelian randomization; Inverse-variance weighted

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82071212, 81901181]
  2. Mathematical Tianyuan Fund of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [12026414]
  3. Beijing Ten Thousand Talents Project [2020A15]
  4. Science and Technology Beijing One Hundred Leading Talent Training Project [Z141107001514006]
  5. Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals' Mission Plan [SML20150802]
  6. Shandong First Medical University [2019QL016, 2019PT007]
  7. Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences [2019QL016, 2019PT007]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that there may be no causal association between plasma vitamin C levels and the risk of Alzheimer's disease in people of European descent. However, a potential relationship between plasma vitamin C levels and the AD proxy phenotype was observed.
Objective Until now, observational studies have explored the impact of vitamin C intake on Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk, however, reported ambiguous findings. To develop effective therapies or prevention, the causal link between vitamin C levels and AD should be established. Methods Here, we selected 11 plasma vitamin C genetic variants from a large-scale plasma vitamin C GWAS dataset (N = 52,018) as the potential instrumental variables. We extracted their corresponding summary statistics from large-scale IGAP clinically diagnosed AD GWAS dataset (N = 63,926) and UK Biobank AD proxy phenotype GWAS dataset (N = 314,278), as well as two UK Biobank subgroups including the maternal AD group (27,696 cases of maternal AD and 260,980 controls) and paternal AD group (14,338 cases of paternal AD and 245,941 controls). We then performed a Mendelian randomization (MR) study to evaluate the causal association between plasma vitamin C levels and the risk of AD and AD proxy phenotype. Meanwhile, we further verified these findings using a large-scale cognitive performance GWAS dataset (N = 257,841). Results In IGAP, we found no significant causal association between plasma vitamin C levels and the risk of AD. In UK Biobank, we found that per 1 SD increase in plasma vitamin C levels (about 20.2 mu mol/l) was significantly associated with the reduced risk of AD proxy phenotype (OR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.88-0.98, P = 7.00E-03). A subgroup MR analysis in UK Biobank indicated that per 1 SD increase in plasma vitamin C levels could significantly reduce the risk of AD proxy phenotype in the maternal AD group (OR = 0.89, 95% CI 0.84-0.94, P = 7.29E-05), but not in the paternal AD group (OR = 1.02, 95% CI 0.92-1.12, P = 7.59E-01). The leave-one-out permutation further showed that the SLC23A1 rs33972313 variant largely changed the precision of the overall MR estimates in all these four GWAS datasets. Meanwhile, we did not observe any significant causal effect of plasma vitamin C levels on the cognitive performance. Conclusion We demonstrated that there may be no causal association between plasma vitamin C levels and the risk of AD in people of European descent. The insistent findings in clinically diagnosed AD and AD proxy phenotype may be caused by the phenotypic heterogeneity.

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