Circulating glutamine and Alzheimer’s disease: a Mendelian randomization study
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Abstract
ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION Alzheimer’s disease is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder. Its worldwide prevalence is over 24 million and is expected to double by 2040. Finding ways to prevent its cognitive decline is urgent. METHODS A two-sample Mendelian randomization study was performed instrumenting glutamine, which is abundant in blood, capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier, and involved in a metabolic cycle with glutamate in the brain. RESULTS The results reveal a protective effect of circulating glutamine (inverse-variance weighted method, odds ratio per 1-SD increase in circulating glutamine = 0.83; 95% CI 0.71, 0.97; P = 0.02). CONCLUSION These findings lend credence to the emerging story supporting the modifiability of glutamine/glutamate metabolism for the prevention of cognitive decline. More circulating glutamine might mean that more substrate is available during times of stress, acting as a neuroprotectant. Modifications to exogenous glutamine may be worth exploring in future efforts to prevent and/or treat Alzheimer’s disease.
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