Comprehensive analyses of circulating cardiometabolic proteins and objective measures of fat mass
Journal article, 2023

Background: The underlying molecular pathways for the effect of excess fat mass on cardiometabolic diseases is not well understood. Since body mass index is a suboptimal measure of body fat content, we investigated the relationship of fat mass measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry with circulating cardiometabolic proteins. Methods: We used data from a population-based cohort of 4950 Swedish women (55–85 years), divided into discovery and replication samples; 276 proteins were assessed with three Olink Proseek Multiplex panels. We used random forest to identify the most relevant biomarker candidates related to fat mass index (FMI), multivariable linear regression to further investigate the associations between FMI characteristics and circulating proteins adjusted for potential confounders, and principal component analysis (PCA) for the detection of common covariance patterns among the proteins. Results: Total FMI was associated with 66 proteins following adjustment for multiple testing in discovery and replication multivariable analyses. Five proteins not previously associated with body size were associated with either lower FMI (calsyntenin-2 (CLSTN2), kallikrein-10 (KLK10)), or higher FMI (scavenger receptor cysteine-rich domain-containing group B protein (SSC4D), trem-like transcript 2 protein (TLT-2), and interleukin-6 receptor subunit alpha (IL-6RA)). PCA provided an efficient summary of the main variation in FMI-related circulating proteins involved in glucose and lipid metabolism, appetite regulation, adipocyte differentiation, immune response and inflammation. Similar patterns were observed for regional fat mass measures. Conclusions: This is the first large study showing associations between fat mass and circulating cardiometabolic proteins. Proteins not previously linked to body size are implicated in modulation of postsynaptic signals, inflammation, and carcinogenesis.

Author

Olga E. Titova

Uppsala University

Carl Brunius

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Food and Nutrition Science

Uppsala University

Eva Warensjö Lemming

Uppsala University

Karl Stattin

Uppsala University

John A. Baron

The University of North Carolina System

Uppsala University

Liisa Byberg

Uppsala University

Karl Michaëlsson

Uppsala University

Susanna C. Larsson

Karolinska Institutet

Uppsala University

International Journal of Obesity

0307-0565 (ISSN) 1476-5497 (eISSN)

Vol. 47 11 1043-1049

Subject Categories

Cancer and Oncology

Nutrition and Dietetics

DOI

10.1038/s41366-023-01351-z

PubMed

37550405

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9