Evidence for distinct neuro-metabolic phenotypes in humans

  • Bofan Wu
  • Andrew P Bagshaw
  • Clayton Hickey
  • Simone Kühn
  • Martin Wilson

Abstract

Advances in magnetic resonance imaging have shown how individual differences in the structure and function of the human brain relate to health and cognition. The relationship between individual differences and the levels of neuro-metabolites, however, remains largely unexplored - despite the potential for the discovery of novel behavioural and disease phenotypes. In this study, we measured 14 metabolite levels, normalised as ratios to total-creatine, with 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) acquired from the bilateral anterior cingulate cortices of six healthy participants, repeatedly over a period of four months. ANOVA tests revealed statistically significant differences of 3 metabolites and 3 commonly used combinations (total-choline, glutamate + glutamine and total-N-acetylaspartate) between the participants, with scyllo-inositol (F=85, p=6e-26) and total-choline (F=39, p=1e-17) having the greatest discriminatory power. This was not attributable to structural differences. When predicting individuals from the repeated MRS measurements, a leave-one-out classification accuracy of 88% was achieved using a support vector machine based on scyllo-inositol and total-choline levels. Accuracy increased to 98% with the addition of total-N-acetylaspartate and myo-inositol - demonstrating the efficacy of combining MRS with machine learning and metabolomic methodology. These results provide evidence for the existence of neuro-metabolic phenotypes, which may be non-invasively measured using widely available 3 Tesla MRS. Establishing these phenotypes in a larger cohort and investigating their connection to brain health and function presents an important area for future study.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number118902
ISSN1053-8119
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.04.2022

Comment Deanary

Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PubMed 35033676