Blood-based epigenome-wide analyses of cognitive abilities

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Abstract

Background: Blood-based markers of cognitive functioning might provide an accessible way to track neurodegeneration years prior to clinical manifestation of cognitive impairment and dementia. Results: Using blood-based epigenome-wide analyses of general cognitive function, we show that individual differences in DNA methylation (DNAm) explain 35.0% of the variance in general cognitive function (g). A DNAm predictor explains ~4% of the variance, independently of a polygenic score, in two external cohorts. It also associates with circulating levels of neurology- and inflammation-related proteins, global brain imaging metrics, and regional cortical volumes. Conclusions: As sample sizes increase, the ability to assess cognitive function from DNAm data may be informative in settings where cognitive testing is unreliable or unavailable.

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McCartney, D. L., Hillary, R. F., Conole, E. L. S., Banos, D. T., Gadd, D. A., Walker, R. M., … Marioni, R. E. (2022). Blood-based epigenome-wide analyses of cognitive abilities. Genome Biology, 23(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-021-02596-5

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