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Glutaric acid associates with early detection of cognitive impairment deciphering the association with depression

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posted on 2025-01-30, 05:00 authored by Manas Chakraborty, Kunal DhimanKunal Dhiman, Perminder S Sachdev, Henry Brodaty, Brian Draper, Julian N Trollor, Simone Reppermund, Kristan Kang, Karen A Mather, Anne Poljak, Wei Wen, Katya T Numbers, Nicole A Kochan, Vibeke S Catts, Veer Gupta
AbstractBackgroundThe initiation of cognitive impairment is triggered by a myriad of pathological events occurring decades before clinical symptoms manifest. Perturbed glucose and fatty acid metabolism notably contribute to the development of cognitive impairment, progressing further into clinical dementia. These metabolic alterations are evident in plasma through changes in specific metabolites. Notably, these changes are characteristic features in the pathophysiology of depression, a significant risk factor for cognitive impairment. This project aims to establish a blood‐based biomarker signature for early identification of cognitive changes in individuals with depression. Moreover, it aims to assist in diagnosing and understanding disease progression by quantifying plasma metabolite levels linked to fatty acid metabolism in samples obtained from participants in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study.MethodPlasma samples underwent analysis to quantify fatty acids and carnitines using chemical derivatization through UPLC‐MRM/MS coupled with a 4000 QTRAP mass spectrometer which was equipped with an electrospray ion (ESI) source and operated in the multiple‐reaction monitoring (MRM) mode with negative‐ion (‐) detection.10‐μL aliquots of each of the resultant calibration solutions and each of the sample solutions were injected for analysis.ResultANCOVA, revealed significant changes in the levels of several biomarkers including glycolic acid (p‐value: 0.033), C181 carnitine (p‐value: 0.013), glutaric acid (p‐value: 0.08) levels in groups with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and MCI with comorbid depression compared to healthy groups. ROC curve analysis demonstrated that glutaric acid effectively distinguished between MCI and non‐MCI participants. The optimal threshold for classifying participants into MCI and non‐MCI groups was determined using the Youden Index to dichotomize them based on high and low biomarker levels. Logistic regression analysis, adjusting for age, sex, APOE ε4 genotype, and comorbid depression, revealed a significant association between glutaric acid levels and cognitive impairment in the context of depression, with a p‐value of <0.001 and an odds ratio of 2.49.ConclusionGlutaric acid proved to be a reliable discriminator between participants with MCI and those without MCI. The aforementioned findings revealed a strong correlation between glutaric acid and cognitive impairment associated with depression which could be used as biomarker for early detection of cognitice impairment.

History

Journal

Alzheimer's and Dementia

Volume

20

Article number

e088825

Pagination

1-2

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1552-5260

eISSN

1552-5279

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN Other journal article

Issue

S2

Publisher

Wiley