4.7 Article

Dietary-Derived Essential Nutrients and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: A Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study

期刊

NUTRIENTS
卷 14, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14050920

关键词

amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; nutrition; Mendelian randomization; genes; risk factor

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81873784, 82071426]
  2. Clinical Cohort Construction Program of Peking University Third Hospital [BYSYDL2019002]

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This study used Mendelian randomization analysis to investigate the potential causal relationship between essential nutrients and the risk of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The study found a causal association between genetically predicted linoleic acid (LA) and ALS risk, and a negative association between vitamin D/vitamin E and ALS risk. No causal effect was observed for essential amino acids and minerals on ALS risk.
Previous studies have suggested a close but inconsistent relationship between essential nutrients and the risk of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and whether this association is causal remains unknown. We aimed to investigate the potential causal relation between essential nutrients (essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, essential minerals, and essential vitamins) and the risk of ALS using Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis. Large-scale European-based genome-wide association studies' (GWASs) summary data related to ALS (assembling 27,205 ALS patients and 110,881 controls) and essential nutrient concentrations were separately obtained. MR analysis was performed using the inverse variance-weighted (IVW) method, and sensitivity analysis was conducted by the weighted median method, simple median method, MR-Egger method and MR-PRESSO method. We found a causal association between genetically predicted linoleic acid (LA) and the risk of ALS (OR: 1.066; 95% CI: 1.011-1.125; p = 0.019). An inverse association with ALS risk was noted for vitamin D (OR: 0.899; 95% CI: 0.819-0.987; p = 0.025) and for vitamin E (OR: 0.461; 95% CI: 0.340-0.626; p = 6.25 x 10(-7)). The sensitivity analyses illustrated similar trends. No causal effect was observed between essential amino acids and minerals on ALS. Our study profiled the effects of diet-derived circulating nutrients on the risk of ALS and demonstrated that vitamin D and vitamin E are protective against the risk of ALS, and LA is a suggested risk factor for ALS.

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