» Articles » PMID: 39179617

Causal Relationship Between Immune Cells and Epilepsy Mediated by Metabolites Analyzed Through Mendelian Randomization

Overview
Journal Sci Rep
Specialty Science
Date 2024 Aug 23
PMID 39179617
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Our study investigated the causal relationship between immune cells, metabolites, and epilepsy using two-sample Mendelian Randomization (MR) and mediation MR analysis of 731 immune cell traits and 1400 metabolites. Our core methodology centered on inverse-variance weighted MR, supplemented by other methods. This approach was crucial in clarifying the potential intermediary functions of metabolites in the genetic links between traits of immune cells and epilepsy. We found a causal relationship between immune cells and epilepsy. Specifically, the genetically predicted levels of CD64 on CD14-CD16- are positively correlated with the risk of epilepsy (p < 0.001, OR = 1.0826, 95% CI 1.0361-1.1312). Similarly, metabolites also exhibit a causal relationship with both immune cells (OR = 1.0438, 95% CI 1.0087-1.0801, p = 0.0140) and epilepsy (p = 0.0334, OR = 1.0897, 95% CI 1.0068-1.1795), and sensitivity analysis was conducted to further validate these relationships. Importantly, our intermediate MR results suggest that the metabolite Paraxanthine to linoleate (18:2n6) ratio may mediate the causal relationship between immune cell CD64 on CD14-CD16- and epilepsy, with a mediation effect of 5.05%. The results suggest the importance of specific immune cell levels and metabolites in understanding epilepsy's pathogenesis, which is significant for its prevention and treatment.

References
1.
Passaro A, Lebos A, Yao Y, Stice S . Immune Response in Neurological Pathology: Emerging Role of Central and Peripheral Immune Crosstalk. Front Immunol. 2021; 12:676621. PMC: 8222736. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.676621. View

2.
Egger M, Smith G, Phillips A . Meta-analysis: principles and procedures. BMJ. 1998; 315(7121):1533-7. PMC: 2127925. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.315.7121.1533. View

3.
Grebenciucova E, VanHaerents S . Interleukin 6: at the interface of human health and disease. Front Immunol. 2023; 14:1255533. PMC: 10569068. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1255533. View

4.
Vesga-Jimenez D, Martin C, Barreto G, Aristizabal-Pachon A, Pinzon A, Gonzalez J . Fatty Acids: An Insight into the Pathogenesis of Neurodegenerative Diseases and Therapeutic Potential. Int J Mol Sci. 2022; 23(5). PMC: 8910658. DOI: 10.3390/ijms23052577. View

5.
Kawasaki Y, Zhang L, Cheng J, Ji R . Cytokine mechanisms of central sensitization: distinct and overlapping role of interleukin-1beta, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha in regulating synaptic and neuronal activity in the superficial spinal cord. J Neurosci. 2008; 28(20):5189-94. PMC: 2408767. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3338-07.2008. View