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Association of caffeine and related analytes with resistance to Parkinson disease among

Authors :
Grace F, Crotty
Romeo, Maciuca
Eric A, Macklin
Junhua, Wang
Manuel, Montalban
Sonnet S, Davis
Jamal I, Alkabsh
Rachit, Bakshi
Xiqun, Chen
Alberto, Ascherio
Giuseppe, Astarita
Sarah, Huntwork-Rodriguez
Michael A, Schwarzschild
Source :
Neurology, article-version (Version of Record) 3
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective To identify markers of resistance to developing Parkinson disease (PD) among LRRK2 mutation carriers (LRRK2+), we carried out metabolomic profiling in individuals with PD and unaffected controls (UC), with and without the LRRK2 mutation. Methods Plasma from 368 patients with PD and UC in the LRRK2 Cohort Consortium (LCC), comprising 118 LRRK2+/PD+, 115 LRRK2+/UC, 70 LRRK2−/PD+, and 65 LRRK2−/UC, and CSF available from 68 of them, were analyzed by liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry. For 282 analytes quantified in plasma and CSF, we assessed differences among the 4 groups and interactions between LRRK2 and PD status, using analysis of covariance models adjusted by age, study site cohort, and sex, with p value corrections for multiple comparisons. Results Plasma caffeine concentration was lower in patients with PD vs UC (p < 0.001), more so among LRRK2+ carriers (by 76%) than among LRRK2− participants (by 31%), with significant interaction between LRRK2 and PD status (p = 0.005). Similar results were found for caffeine metabolites (paraxanthine, theophylline, 1-methylxanthine) and a nonxanthine marker of coffee consumption (trigonelline) in plasma, and in the subset of corresponding CSF samples. Dietary caffeine was also lower in LRRK2+/PD+ compared to LRRK2+/UC with significant interaction effect with the LRRK2+ mutation (p < 0.001). Conclusions Metabolomic analyses of the LCC samples identified caffeine, its demethylation metabolites, and trigonelline as prominent markers of resistance to PD linked to pathogenic LRRK2 mutations, more so than to idiopathic PD. Because these analytes are known both as correlates of coffee consumption and as neuroprotectants in animal PD models, the findings may reflect their avoidance by those predisposed to develop PD or their protective effects among LRRK2 mutation carriers.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X
Volume :
95
Issue :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........aa6024e003e6007403c93830cb3878db