Plasma Proteomic Signatures of Physical Activity Provide Insights into Biological Impacts of Physical Activity and its Protective Role Against Dementia

血浆蛋白质组学特征揭示了体力活动的生物学影响及其对痴呆症的保护作用

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Abstract

Physical activity (PA), including sedentary behavior, is associated with many diseases, including Alzheimer's disease and all-cause dementia. However, the specific biological mechanisms through which PA protects against disease are not entirely understood. To address this knowledge gap, we first assessed the conventional observational associations of three self-reported and three device-based PA measures with circulating levels of 2,911 plasma proteins measured in the UK Biobank (n(max)=39,160) and assessed functional enrichment of identified proteins. We then used bi-directional Mendelian randomization (MR) to further evaluate the evidence for causal relationships of PA with protein levels. Finally, we performed mediation analyses to identify proteins that may mediate the relationship of PA with incident all-cause dementia. Our findings revealed 41 proteins consistently associated with all PA measures and 1,027 proteins associated with at least one PA measure. Both conventional observational and MR study designs converged on proteins that appear to increase as a result of PA, including integrin proteins such as ITGAV and ITGAM, as well as MXRA8, CLEC4A, CLEC4M, GFRA1, and ADGRG2; and on proteins that appear to decrease as a result of PA such as LEP, LPL, INHBC, CLMP, PTGDS, ADM, OGN, and PI3. Functional enrichment analyses revealed several relevant processes, including cell-matrix adhesion, integrin-mediated signaling, and collagen binding. Finally, several proteins, including GDF15, ITGAV, HPGDS, BCAN, and MENT, were found to mediate the relationship of PA with all-cause dementia, implicating processes such as synaptic plasticity, neurogenesis and inflammation, through which PA protects against dementia. Our results provide insights into how PA may affect biological processes and protect from all-cause dementia, and provide avenues for future research into the health-promoting effects of PA.

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