Proteins as Mediators of the Association Between Diet Quality and Incident Cardiovascular Disease and All‐Cause Mortality: The Framingham Heart Study

Author:

Kim Youjin1ORCID,Lu Sophia2,Ho Jennifer E.3ORCID,Hwang Shih‐Jen45ORCID,Yao Chen45ORCID,Huan Tianxiao6ORCID,Levy Daniel45ORCID,Ma Jiantao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition Epidemiology and Data Science Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy Tufts University Boston MA

2. Health Sciences Sargent CollegeBoston University Boston MA

3. Division of Cardiology Department of Medicine and Cardiovascular Research Center Massachusetts General Hospital Boston MA

4. Population Sciences Branch National Heart, Lung, and Blood InstituteNIH Bethesda MD

5. Framingham Heart Study Framingham MA

6. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences University of Massachusetts Medical School Worcester MA

Abstract

Background Biological mechanisms underlying the association of a healthy diet with chronic diseases remain unclear. Targeted proteomics may facilitate the understanding of mechanisms linking diet to chronic diseases. Methods and Results We examined 6360 participants (mean age 50 years; 54% women) in the Framingham Heart Study. The associations between diet and 71 cardiovascular disease (CVD)‐related proteins were examined using 3 diet quality scores: the Alternate Healthy Eating Index, the modified Mediterranean‐style Diet Score, and the modified Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet score. A mediation analysis was conducted to examine which proteins mediated the associations of diet with incident CVD and all‐cause mortality. Thirty of the 71 proteins were associated with at least 1 diet quality score ( P <0.0007) after adjustment for multiple covariates in all study participants and confirmed by an internal validation analysis. Gene ontology analysis identified inflammation‐related pathways such as regulation of cell killing and neuroinflammatory response (Bonferroni corrected P <0.05). During a median follow‐up of 13 years, we documented 512 deaths and 488 incident CVD events. Higher diet quality scores were associated with lower risk of CVD ( P ≤0.03) and mortality ( P ≤0.004). After adjusting for multiple potential confounders, 4 proteins (B2M [beta‐2‐microglobulin], GDF15 [growth differentiation factor 15], sICAM1 [soluble intercellular adhesion molecule 1], and UCMGP [uncarboxylated matrix Gla‐protein]) mediated the association between at least 1 diet quality score and all‐cause mortality (median proportion of mediation ranged from 8.6% to 25.9%). We also observed that GDF15 mediated the association of the Alternate Healthy Eating Index with CVD (median proportion of mediation: 8.6%). Conclusions Diet quality is associated with new‐onset CVD and mortality and with circulating CVD‐related proteins. Several proteins appear to mediate the association of diet with these outcomes.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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