To our knowledge, this is the most comprehensive MR analysis to examine the causal associations of four herpesvirus infections and AD. Our results found a suggestive association between mononucleosis and AD, as well as an association between mononucleosis and family history of AD. The result is less susceptible to confounding and reverse causality bias than many previous conventional observational studies [29].
Mendelian randomization rests on three key assumptions [29]. The relevance assumption required that the genetic variants are robustly associated with the exposure of interest. We have selected our IVs from a large GWAS for infections. All SNPs were genome-wide significant (P<5×10-8), which is a much stringent threshold. Although the proportion of variance explained by IVs was not very high, the F-statistics were all highly above the threshold of weak instruments of F-statistic<10 [17]. The other two assumptions are collectively known as independence from pleiotropy. In pleiotropy analyses, we found some SNPs (i.e., rs2596465, rs885950) were associated with “treatment with insulin” from UKB (see Additional file 4). However, recent MR analyses have suggested type-2 diabetes and high plasma glucose are not causally related to the risk of Alzheimer’s disease [30, 31]. According to the existing knowledge, there are no obvious evidences that SNPs in our study influence AD through other pathways, indicating our MR analysis to be valid.
The exposures in our MR analysis were defined by the self-reported history of infection diseases [12] rather than the serological or PCR measures of exact pathogens which were often used in observational studies [32]. That was due to the lack of appropriate GWAS. However, researchers have done several surveys to define each infectious disease phenotype and have taken vaccination into account. And their surveys and phenotype scoring logic were showed in the original study [12]. From some point of view, defining infection by clinical diagnosis may have greater clinical significance for AD prevention and may provide a new perspective for exploring the mechanism of the causal effects.
We found evidence that mononucleosis (mainly caused by EBV) [13] was associated with a higher risk of AD. And it was validated using an GWAS dataset of the family history of AD, which enhanced the robustness of the causal relationship. As for EBV, a recent article detected EBV-specific T cell receptors in cerebrospinal fluid from patients with AD, however, their data were still not a directly evidence of a causality [6]. A meta-analysis based on two case-control studies demonstrates that the EBV infection (OR [95% CI] = 1.45 [1.00, 2.08]) is associated with a higher risk of AD [1]. A prospective cohort study also reports that the presence of EBV in the peripheral blood might be a risk factor for AD (OR = 1.843) [32]. Nevertheless, observational results are prune to reverse causation and confounding bias. Taking the advantage of overcoming these limitations adherent in observational studies [29], our MR findings can be used to provide more reliable evidence of causality between EBV and AD.
Although the specific mechanism underlying the association between infection and AD has not been fully understood, studies have proposed several possible mechanisms. Some have suggested that herpesviridae infection could promote the accumulation of amyloid-β plaques in brain [33]. Carbone et al. have suggested that persistent cycles of latency of the EBV might contribute to stress the systemic immune response and induce altered inflammatory processes, resulting in cognitive decline during aging [32]. Also, a recent article has found evidences indicating the effects of adaptive immunity in AD [6]. Our MR finding was from the aspect of mononucleosis other than the latent infection. In light of the fact that over 90% of the world’s adult population is chronically infected with EBV [34], our results from mononucleosis seem to be more practical, which might imply the underlying effects of immune mechanisms and provide contributions to the current literature [6].
There was no clear evidence to suggest an effect of chickenpox or shingles on AD. Although primary analysis showed a significant association between shingles and risk of AD, it was not validated in independent data, and the direction of point estimates in two analysis was opposite. Chickenpox or shingles are caused by VZV. Chickenpox results from primary infection of VZV, while shingles are caused by the reactivation of the latent VZV within a dorsal root ganglion. The effect of the two infectious diseases on AD may be different. Observational studies have reached the conclusion that VZV infection showed no positive correlations with AD risk [35-37]. Further investigation is warranted concerning whether VSV reactivation is involved in triggering AD onset or progression.
Our MR results showed no significant association between cold sores (caused by reactivation of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)) and AD risk. Accumulating evidence suggest HSV-1 alone does not confer an elevated risk of AD [35, 38, 39], but together with the carriage of APOE-ε4 allele increases AD risk [2, 40, 41]. In contrast to our findings, a case-control study has suggested HSV-1 infection was significantly associated with AD [9]. This result may due to APOE genotype which they didn’t consider. Nevertheless, in an observational study which has determined APOE genotype and other possible confounders previously, they also suggested that both carriage of and reactivated HSV-1 infection increased the risk of developing AD [42]. A likely explanation for the different results is that, there could be some unmeasured confounding or other bias [3, 4]. And a published MR study has suggested a similar results as us that any HSV infection was not related to cognitive function or late-onset AD [8].
There are potential limitations to this study. First, some exposures have only one or two available SNP in our study, and the phenotypic variance tagged by SNP instruments was low (i.e., mononucleosis = 0.20%). However, it is unlikely to affect the statistical power for our MR analyses. Because the primary results are validated using an independent GWAS, and the sample size of datasets in validation is large enough to give a high power. Second, a general challenge of MR is the persistent possibility of horizontal pleiotropic associations between exposure and outcome. To avoid horizontal pleiotropy, we did pleiotropy analysis and checked phenotypes of each SNP. And based on current knowledge, we found no other associated traits were confirmed to have direct effects on AD. On the other hand, our results are less likely to be affected by pleiotropy and heterogeneity due to the small amount of SNPs [7]. Third, participants of infection GWAS are limited to customer base of 23andMe, which may impact the MR results. And the self-reported information may lead to recall bias. Nevertheless, we did not find other appropriate infection GWAS to conduct MR analyses. Importantly, it should be noted that our analysis of infection refers to the infectious diseases caused by specific virus. Whether these present results are tenable in latent infection of those virus is uncertain because of the different underlying pathologic changes. Moreover, as for mononucleosis, although 90% are caused by EBV, the remaining 10% is caused by other virus such as the human herpesvirus 6, which may limit our inference extended to EBV. Large and precise defined herpesvirus infection GWAS studies are needed to explore the MR application in this field.