Lipidomics profiling reveals distinct patterns of plasma sphingolipid alterations in Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia

Author:

Chua Xin Ying,Torta Federico,Chong Joyce R.,Venketasubramanian Narayanaswamy,Hilal Saima,Wenk Markus R.,Chen Christopher P.,Arumugam Thiruma V.,Herr Deron R.,Lai Mitchell K. P.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) are two of the commonest causes of dementia in the elderly. Of the myriad biomolecules implicated in dementia pathogenesis, sphingolipids have attracted relatively scant research attention despite their known involvement in multiple pathophysiological processes. The potential utility of peripheral sphingolipids as biomarkers in dementia cohorts with high concomitance of cerebrovascular diseases is also unclear. Methods Using a lipidomics platform, we performed a case–control study of plasma sphingolipids in a prospectively assessed cohort of 526 participants (non-cognitively impaired, NCI = 93, cognitively impaired = 217, AD = 166, VaD = 50) using a lipidomics platform. Results Distinct patterns of sphingolipid alterations were found in AD and VaD, namely an upregulation of d18:1 species in AD compared to downregulation of d16:1 species in VaD. In particular, GM3 d18:1/16:0 and GM3 d18:1/24:1 showed the strongest positive associations with AD. Furthermore, evaluation of sphingolipids panels showed specific combinations with higher sensitivity and specificity for classification of AD (Cer d16:1/24:0. Cer d18:1/16:0, GM3 d16:1/22:0, GM3 d18:1/16:0, SM d16:1/22:0, HexCer d18:1/18:0) and VAD (Cer d16:1/24:0, Cer d18:1/16:0, Hex2Cer d16:1/16:0, HexCer d18:1/18:0, SM d16:1/16:0, SM d16:1/20:0, SM d18:2/22:0) compared to NCI. Conclusions AD and VaD are associated with distinct changes of plasma sphingolipids, warranting further studies into underlying pathophysiological mechanisms and assessments of their potential utility as dementia biomarkers and therapeutic targets.

Funder

National University Health System

National Medical Research Council

La Trobe University

Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine Healthy Longevity Translational Research Programme

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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