Quantitative trait loci mapping of circulating metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid to uncover biological mechanisms involved in brain-related phenotypes.
Lianne Maria ReusToni A BoltzMarcelo FranciaMerel BotNaren RameshMaria KorominaYolande A L PijnenburgAnouk den BraberWiesje Maria van der FlierPieter Jelle VisserSven J Van der LeeBetty M TijmsCharlotte E TeunissenLoes M Olde LoohuisRoel A OphoffPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Genomic studies of molecular traits have provided mechanistic insights into complex disease, though these lag behind for brain-related traits due to the inaccessibility of brain tissue. We leveraged cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to study neurobiological mechanisms in vivo , measuring 5,543 CSF metabolites, the largest panel in CSF to date, in 977 individuals of European ancestry. Individuals originated from two separate cohorts including cognitively healthy subjects (n=490) and a well-characterized memory clinic sample, the Amsterdam Dementia Cohort (ADC, n=487). We performed metabolite quantitative trait loci (mQTL) mapping on CSF metabolomics and found 126 significant mQTLs, representing 65 unique CSF metabolites across 51 independent loci. To better understand the role of CSF mQTLs in brain-related disorders, we performed a metabolome-wide association study (MWAS), identifying 40 associations between CSF metabolites and brain traits. Similarly, over 90% of significant mQTLs demonstrated colocalized associations with brain-specific gene expression, unveiling potential neurobiological pathways.