Personal, social, and natural co-exposure pattern and plasma proteins in cardiometabolic diseases
Xuewei Tang, Huan Xu, Gonghua Wu, Shaokun Yang, Yonghua Ye, Yan An, Yilin Jiang, Zilong Wang, Sujun Chen, Juying Zhang, Xiong Xiao, Bing Guo, Xing Zhao

TL;DR
This study explores how combined personal, social, and environmental factors affect heart and metabolic diseases, finding that social deprivation has the highest risk and involves immune proteins.
Contribution
The study identifies novel co-exposure patterns and their associated plasma proteins that mediate cardiometabolic disease risk.
Findings
Social Deprivation pattern showed the highest cardiometabolic disease risk with hazard ratios from 1.15 to 1.40.
Inflammatory and immune proteins were linked to all co-exposure patterns.
Specific proteins like CDCP1, CXCL17, and FGF21 mediated the Air and Noise Pollution and Social Deprivation patterns.
Abstract
Multiple environmental exposures elevate the risk of cardiometabolic diseases (CMDs), yet the impact of combined co-exposures, and their protein-mediated mechanisms remain underexplored. Among 366,261 UK Biobank participants, this study identified five distinct exposure patterns through clustering analysis: Air and Noise Pollution, Social Deprivation, Blue and Green Space, Health Behaviors and Reference. Notably, the Social Deprivation pattern showed the highest CMDs risk, with hazard ratios ranging from 1.15 to 1.40. Inflammatory and immune proteins were associated with all co-exposure patterns. The Air and Noise Pollution and Social Deprivation patterns demonstrated that the common mediating proteins included CDCP1, CXCL17, FGF21, GDF15 and IGFBP4. CXCL13, CA6, SDC1, and PTN mediated Healthy Behaviors, while MMP12 mediated Blue and Green Space pattern. This study offers etiological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging · GDF15 and Related Biomarkers · Cardiovascular Health and Risk Factors
