4.7 Article

Food and Microbiota Metabolites Associate with Cognitive Decline in Older Subjects: A 12-Year Prospective Study

Journal

MOLECULAR NUTRITION & FOOD RESEARCH
Volume 65, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.202100606

Keywords

cognitive decline; diet; food metabolome; gut microbiota; metabolomics

Funding

  1. European Joint Programming Initiative A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life (JPI HDHL) - MINECO (Spain) [PCIN-2015-229]
  2. ANR (France) [ANR-15-HDHL-0002-05]
  3. Medical Research Council UK (UK) [MR/N030087/1]
  4. JPI-HDHL ERA-Net on INtesTInal MICrobiomics (ERA-HDHL INTIMIC) - Instituto de Salud Carlos III [AC19/00096]
  5. European Regional Development Fund A way to make Europe
  6. Generalitat de Catalunya's Agency AGAUR [2017SGR1546]
  7. MINECO [FJCI-2015-26590]
  8. CAL the ICREA Academia award 2018
  9. NWO
  10. Alzheimer Nederland
  11. UvA Urban Mental Health program
  12. University Research school (Ecole Universitaire de Recherche, EUR) Digital Public Health PhD program within the French National Research Agency (ANR) Programme d'Investissement d'Avenir (Investment for the Future) PIA3 [17-EURE-0019]
  13. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale
  14. Caisse Nationale Maladie des Travailleurs Salaries
  15. Direction Generale de la Sante
  16. Mutuelle Generale de l'Education Nationale
  17. Institut de la Longevite
  18. Regional Government of Aquitaine
  19. Regional Government of Bourgogne
  20. Fondation de France
  21. Ministry of Research-INSERM Programme Cohortes et collections de donnees biologiques
  22. French National Research Agency COGINUT [ANR-06-PNRA-005]
  23. Fondation Plan Alzheimer [FCS 2009-2012]
  24. Caisse Nationale pour la Solidarite et l'Autonomie (CNSA)
  25. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-15-HDHL-0002] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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This study investigated the association between food-related and microbiota-derived circulating metabolites and cognitive decline in participants free of dementia. Results showed a protective relationship with metabolites from cocoa, coffee, mushrooms, red wine, and polyphenol-rich foods, and a negative association with metabolites related to unhealthy dietary components like artificial sweeteners and alcohol. These findings provide insight into potential targets for preserving cognitive health through diet, gut microbiota, and endogenous metabolism interactions.
Scope Diet is considered an important modulator of cognitive decline and dementia, but the available evidence is, however, still fragmented and often inconsistent. Methods and Results The article studies the long-term prospective Three-City Cohort, which consists of two separate nested case-control sample sets from different geographic regions (Bordeaux, n = 418; Dijon, n = 424). Cognitive decline is evaluated through five neuropsychological tests (Mini-Mental State Examination, Benton Visual Retention Test, Isaac's Set Test, Trail-Making Test part A, and Trail-Making Test part B). The food-related and microbiota-derived circulating metabolome is studied in participants free of dementia at baseline, by subjecting serum samples to large-scale quantitative metabolomics analysis. A protective association is found between metabolites derived from cocoa, coffee, mushrooms, red wine, the microbial metabolism of polyphenol-rich foods, and cognitive decline, as well as a negative association with metabolites related to unhealthy dietary components, such as artificial sweeteners and alcohol. Conclusion These results provide insight into the early metabolic events that are associated with the later risk to develop cognitive decline within the crosstalk between diet, gut microbiota and the endogenous metabolism, which can help identify potential targets for preventive and therapeutic strategies to preserve cognitive health.

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