Uncovering the metabolic-epigenetic links between gene expression and stroke: insights from lactylation pathway MR study
Jiuxu Kan, Yong Hong, Ruoxin Min, Bowen Zhang, Hong Wang

TL;DR
This study explores how lactylation, a metabolic process, influences stroke risk through genetic analysis, revealing genes that may increase or protect against stroke.
Contribution
The study provides novel genetic evidence linking lactylation-related gene expression to ischemic stroke and its subtypes using Mendelian randomization.
Findings
Elevated expression of SIRT1, SMARCA4, STMN1, and LDHA increases stroke risk.
Genes like SLC16A1, SIRT3, PFKP, and TKT show protective effects against stroke.
Most associations were robust across multiple genetic models.
Abstract
Lactylation, a novel post-translational modification driven by lactate accumulation, has been implicated in neuroinflammation and metabolic stress. However, its causal relevance to ischemic stroke (IS) and its subtypes—large artery stroke (LAS), cardioembolic stroke (CES), and small vessel stroke (SVS)—remains unknown. We conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization (TSMR) analysis to investigate the causal relationships between lactylation-associated gene expression and IS risk. Lactylation-related genes were identified from a recent literature review and intersected with eQTL data from the eQTLGen Consortium (n = 31,684). Summary statistics for IS and its subtypes were obtained from large-scale GWAS (total cases = 62,100; controls = 1,234,808). Primary analyses used the inverse-variance weighted (IVW) method, complemented by MR-Egger, weighted median, and sensitivity tests to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurological diseases and metabolism · Sirtuins and Resveratrol in Medicine · Cerebrovascular and genetic disorders
