Skip to content
Preprint · OA via OpenAlex

Altered bile acid profile associates with cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease—An emerging role for gut microbiome

Siamak MahmoudianDehkordi, Matthias Arnold, Kwangsik Nho, Shahzad Ahmad, Wei Jia, Guoxiang Xie, Gregory Louie, Alexandra Kueider‐Paisley, M. Arthur Moseley, Paul M. Thompson, Lisa St John Williams, Jessica D. Tenenbaum, Colette Blach, Rebecca Baillie, Xianlin Han

Alzheimer s & Dementia · 2018 · ▲ 690 citations

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Increasing evidence suggests a role for the gut microbiome in central nervous system disorders and a specific role for the gut-brain axis in neurodegeneration. Bile acids (BAs), products of cholesterol metabolism and clearance, are produced in the liver and are further metabolized by gut bacteria. They have major regulatory and signaling functions and seem dysregulated in Alzheimer's disease (AD). METHODS: Serum levels of 15 primary and secondary BAs and their conjugated forms were measured in 1464 subjects including 370 cognitively normal older adults, 284 with early mild cognitive impairment, 505 with late mild cognitive impairment, and 305 AD cases enrolled in the AD Neuroimaging Initiative. We assessed associations of BA profiles including selected ratios with diagnosis, cognition, and AD-related genetic variants, adjusting for confounders and multiple testing. RESULTS: In AD compared to cognitively normal older adults, we observed significantly lower serum concentrations of a primary BA (cholic acid [CA]) and increased levels of the bacterially produced, secondary BA, deoxycholic acid, and its glycine and taurine conjugated forms. An increased ratio of deoxycholic acid:CA, which reflects 7α-dehydroxylation of CA by gut bacteria, strongly associated with cognitive decline, a finding replicated in serum and brain samples in the Rush Religious Orders and Memory and Aging Project. Several genetic variants in immune response-related genes implicated in AD showed associations with BA profiles. DISCUSSION: We report for the first time an association between altered BA profile, genetic variants implicated in AD, and cognitive changes in disease using a large multicenter study. These findings warrant further investigation of gut dysbiosis and possible role of gut-liver-brain axis in the pathogenesis of AD.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1016/j.jalz.2018.07.217
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-12 MST

Cite this

APA
MahmoudianDehkordi, S., Arnold, M., Nho, K., Ahmad, S., Jia, W., Xie, G., Louie, G., Kueider‐Paisley, A., Moseley, M.A., Thompson, P.M., Williams, L.S.J., Tenenbaum, J.D., Blach, C., Baillie, R., Han, X., Bhattacharyya, S., Toledo, J.B., Schafferer, S., Klein, S., &amp; Koal, T. (2018). Altered bile acid profile associates with cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease—An emerging role for gut microbiome. <em>Alzheimer s & Dementia</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jalz.2018.07.217
Vancouver
MahmoudianDehkordi S, Arnold M, Nho K, Ahmad S, Jia W, Xie G, et al. Altered bile acid profile associates with cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease—An emerging role for gut microbiome. Alzheimer s & Dementia. 2018. doi:10.1016/j.jalz.2018.07.217.
BibTeX
@unpublished{siamak2018Altere, title = {Altered bile acid profile associates with cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease—An emerging role for gut microbiome}, author = {Siamak MahmoudianDehkordi and Matthias Arnold and Kwangsik Nho and Shahzad Ahmad and Wei Jia and Guoxiang Xie and Gregory Louie and Alexandra Kueider‐Paisley and M. Arthur Moseley and Paul M. Thompson and Lisa St John Williams and Jessica D. Tenenbaum and Colette Blach and Rebecca Baillie and Xianlin Han and Sudeepa Bhattacharyya and Jon B. Toledo and Simon Schafferer and Sebastian Klein and Therese Koal and Shannon L. Risacher and Mitchel A. Kling and Alison A. Motsinger‐Reif and Daniel M. Rotroff and John Jack}, journal = {Alzheimer s & Dementia}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1016/j.jalz.2018.07.217}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings