Mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with cognitive impairment in adults with OSA without dementia.
Li. Mengfan M; Shen. Tengqun T; Yao. Ran R; Sun. Hairong H; Liu. Xiaoxiao X; Li. Zhenguang Z; Zhang. Jinbiao J
Key Findings
- Higher neuron‑derived exosome (NDE) levels of humanin are associated with increased odds of cognitive impairment in OSA patients
- Humanin, MOTS‑c and neurogranin levels mediate the link between intermittent hypoxia (low oxygen during sleep) and lower cognitive test scores
- One year of CPAP therapy reduces NDE humanin (and MOTS‑c, NRGN) levels, indicating partial reversibility of mitochondrial dysfunction
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that untreated sleep apnea may drive mitochondrial stress detectable via humanin, which correlates with cognitive decline. Consistent CPAP use can lower these stress markers and may protect brain function. While humanin isn’t yet a supplement you can safely dose, tracking sleep quality and using CPAP are actionable steps to support mitochondrial and cognitive health.
Summary
The study found that people with sleep apnea who also have mild cognitive problems have higher levels of the mitochondrial peptide humanin (and related peptides) in brain‑derived particles in their blood. These higher levels are linked to worse thinking scores, and they seem to explain part of how poor oxygen during sleep harms the brain. Using a CPAP machine for a year lowered humanin levels, suggesting that fixing sleep apnea can partly reverse the mitochondrial stress linked to cognition.
Abstract
Increased reactive oxygen species associated with loss of mitochondrial function affect synaptic activity, which is an important mechanism underlying cognitive decline. This study assesses the role of mitochondrial proteins in neuron-derived exosomes (NDEs) on cognitive impairment in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) without dementia. Analyses were conducted in 268 study participants with complete polysomnography data, cognitive tests, and important clinical data available. NDEs were isolated immunochemically for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay quantification of mitochondrial proteins, i.e., humanin and mitochondrial open reading frame of the 12S rRNA-c (MOTS-c), and synaptic protein, i.e., neurogranin (NRGN). A mediation analysis of the relationship between sleep parameters and cognition was performed using humanin, MOTS-c, and NRGN values as a mediating factor. Twenty-two patients with moderate to severe OSA who received CPAP therapy were followed up, and humanin, MOTS-c and NRGN levels were reassessed after 1 year of treatment. All participants were divided into the OSA + MCI group (n = 91), OSA-MCI group (n = 89), MCI group (MCI without OSA) (n = 38) and control group (normal cognitive state without OSA) (n = 50). The mean CD63-normalized NDE levels of humanin, MOTS-c, and NRGN in the OSA + MCI group were higher than those in the OSA-MCI and control groups. The NDE levels of humanin, MOTS-c, and NRGN in the MCI group were lower than those in controls. The odds of cognitive impairment in patients with OSA were higher with higher NDE levels of humanin, MOTS-c, and NRGN (odds ratio (OR): 2.100, 95 % confidence interval (CI): 1.646-2.679, P < 0.001; OR: 5.453, 95 % CI: 3.112-9.556, P < 0.001; OR: 3.115, 95 % CI: 2.163-4.484, P < 0.001). The impaired cognitive performance was associated with higher NDE levels of humanin (β: 0.505, SE: 0.048, P < 0.001), MOTS-c (β: 0.580, SE: 0.001, P < 0.001), and NRGN (β: 0.585, SE: 0.553, P < 0.001). The relationship between sleep parameters (mean SaO<sub>2</sub> and T90) and MoCA scores was mediated by the NDE levels of humanin, MOTS-c, and NRGN with the proportion of mediation varying from 35.33 % to 149.07 %. Receiver operating characteristic curve revealed an area under the curve of 0.905 for humanin, 0.873 for MOTS-c, and 0.934 for NRGN to predict MCI in OSA patients without dementia. Increased humanin, MOTS-c, and NRGN levels significantly decreased after CPAP treatment. Mitochondrial dysfunction is implicated in cognitive impairment in OSA patients without dementia, and mainly mediates the association between intermittent hypoxia and cognitive impairment in adults with OSA without dementia. Mitochondrial dysfunction can be partially reversible by CPAP treatment. Mitochondrial proteins can be used as markers of cognitive impairment in patients with OSA.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-04-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.sleep.2024.04.035
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