Helicobacter pylori, persistent infection burden and structural brain imaging markers

Author:

Beydoun May A1ORCID,Beydoun Hind A2,Hu Yi-Han1ORCID,El-Hajj Ziad W3,Georgescu Michael F1ORCID,Noren Hooten Nicole1ORCID,Li Zhiguang1,Weiss Jordan4ORCID,Lyall Donald M5ORCID,Waldstein Shari R67,Hedges Dawson W8,Gale Shawn D8ORCID,Launer Lenore J1,Evans Michele K1ORCID,Zonderman Alan B1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Epidemiology and Population Sciences, National Institute on Aging, NIA/NIH/IRP , Baltimore, MD 21224 , USA

2. Department of Research Programs, Fort Belvoir Community Hospital , Fort Belvoir, VA 22060 , USA

3. Department of Biology, McGill University , Montreal, QC H3A 1B1 , Canada

4. Stanford Center on Longevity, Stanford University , Stanford, CA 94305 , USA

5. School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow , Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland , UK

6. Department of Psychology, University of Maryland , Catonsville, MD 21250 , USA

7. Division of Gerontology, Geriatrics, and Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine , Baltimore, MD 21201 , USA

8. Department of Psychology, Brigham Young University , Provo, UT 84602 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Persistent infections, whether viral, bacterial or parasitic, including Helicobacter pylori infection, have been implicated in non-communicable diseases, including dementia and other neurodegenerative diseases. In this cross-sectional study, data on 635 cognitively normal participants from the UK Biobank study (2006–21, age range: 40–70 years) were used to examine whether H. pylori seropositivity (e.g. presence of antibodies), serointensities of five H. pylori antigens and a measure of total persistent infection burden were associated with selected brain volumetric structural MRI (total, white, grey matter, frontal grey matter (left/right), white matter hyperintensity as percent intracranial volume and bi-lateral sub-cortical volumes) and diffusion-weighted MRI measures (global and tract-specific bi-lateral fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity), after an average 9–10 years of lag time. Persistent infection burden was calculated as a cumulative score of seropositivity for over 20 different pathogens. Multivariable-adjusted linear regression analyses were conducted, whereby selected potential confounders (all measures) and intracranial volume (sub-cortical volumes) were adjusted, with stratification by Alzheimer’s disease polygenic risk score tertile when exposures were H. pylori antigen serointensities. Type I error was adjusted to 0.007. We report little evidence of an association between H. pylori seropositivity and persistent infection burden with various volumetric outcomes (P > 0.007, from multivariable regression models), unlike previously reported in past research. However, H. pylori antigen serointensities, particularly immunoglobulin G against the vacuolating cytotoxin A, GroEL and outer membrane protein antigens, were associated with poorer tract-specific white matter integrity (P < 0.007), with outer membrane protein serointensity linked to worse outcomes in cognition-related tracts such as the external capsule, the anterior limb of the internal capsule and the cingulum, specifically at low Alzheimer’s disease polygenic risk. Vacuolating cytotoxin A serointensity was associated with greater white matter hyperintensity volume among individuals with mid-level Alzheimer’s disease polygenic risk, while among individuals with the highest Alzheimer’s disease polygenic risk, the urease serointensity was consistently associated with reduced bi-lateral caudate volumes and the vacuolating cytotoxin A serointensity was linked to reduced right putamen volume (P < 0.007). Outer membrane protein and urease were associated with larger sub-cortical volumes (e.g. left putamen and right nucleus accumbens) at middle Alzheimer’s disease polygenic risk levels (P < 0.007). Our results shed light on the relationship between H. pylori seropositivity, H. pylori antigen levels and persistent infection burden with brain volumetric structural measures. These data are important given the links between infectious agents and neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease, and can be used for the development of drugs and preventive interventions that would reduce the burden of those diseases.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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