Circulating Antioxidant Nutrients and Brain Age in Midlife Adults.
Authors
Affiliations (1)
Affiliations (1)
- Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, A210 Langley Hall Langley Hall, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, United States (Lower); Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Sennott Square 3417, 210 S. Bouquet Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, United States (DeCataldo, Gianaros); Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, United States (Kraynak).
Abstract
Due to population aging, the increasing prevalence of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and related dementias are major public health concerns. Dietary consumption of antioxidant nutrients, in particular the carotenoid β-carotene, has been associated with lower age-related neurocognitive decline. What is unclear, however, is the extent to which antioxidant nutrients may exert neuroprotective effects via their influence on established indicators of age-related changes in brain tissue. This study thus tested associations of circulating β-carotene and other nutrients with a structural neuroimaging indicator of brain age derived from cross-validated machine learning models trained to predict chronological age from brain tissue morphology in independent cohorts. Midlife adults (N=132, aged 30.4 to 50.8 years, 59 female at birth) underwent a structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) protocol and fasting phlebotomy to assess plasma concentrations of β-carotene, retinol, γ-tocopherol, ⍺-tocopherol, and β-cryptoxanthin. In regression analyses adjusting for chronological age, sex at birth, smoking status, MRI image quality, season of testing, annual income, and education, greater circulating levels of β-carotene were associated with a lower (i.e., younger) predicted brain age (β=-0.23, 95% CI=-0.40 to -0.07, P=0.006). Other nutrients were not statistically associated with brain age, and results persisted after additional covariate control for body mass index, cortical volume, and cortical thickness. These cross-sectional findings are consistent with the possibility that dietary intake of β-carotene may be associated with slower biological aging at the level of the brain, as reflected by a neuroimaging indicator of brain age.