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Association of prion protein with cognitive functioning in humans
Authors:Lutz Philipp Breitling,Heiko Mü  ller,Christa Stegmaier,Matthias Kliegel,Hermann Brenner
Affiliation:1. Division of Clinical Epidemiology and Aging Reseach, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany;2. Saarland Cancer Registry, Saarbrücken, Germany;3. Department of Psychology, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Abstract:

Objectives

Recent animal studies have suggested a key role for cellular prion protein (PrPc) in the pathological consequences of amyloid plaque formation, the hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. This epidemiological study investigated whether serum concentrations of PrPc are associated with cognitive functioning in humans.

Design, Setting, Participants

Cross-sectional study of 1,322 participants from the elderly general population in Germany, aged 65 + years at baseline (2000–2002).

Measurements

Cognitive functioning was assessed by the COGTEL phone interview 5 years after baseline. Serum PrPc was determined by a commercial immunoassay.

Results

In multiple linear regression adjusted for important confounders, subjects in higher PrPc quintiles appeared to have lower cognitive functioning scores than those in the lowest PrPc quintile. Spline regression suggested pronounced non-linearity with an inverse association between PrPc and cognitive functioning levelling off beyond median PrPc. Cognitive subdomain-specific models produced somewhat heterogeneous results.

Conclusion

The findings are suggestive of an independent association of PrPc with cognitive functioning in humans. Confirmatory and longitudinal studies are needed to elucidate the potential of PrPc for applications in early risk stratification for cognitive impairment.
Keywords:Prion protein   Epidemiological study   Homo sapiens   Cognition   Executive function
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