This is a preprint.
Metabolome-wide Mendelian randomization characterizes heterogeneous and shared causal effects of metabolites on human health
- PMID: 37425837
- PMCID: PMC10327254
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.06.26.23291721
Metabolome-wide Mendelian randomization characterizes heterogeneous and shared causal effects of metabolites on human health
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Assessing the potential causal effects of 1099 plasma metabolites on 2099 binary disease endpoints.Nat Commun. 2025 Mar 28;16(1):3039. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-58129-2. Nat Commun. 2025. PMID: 40155430 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Metabolites are small molecules that are useful for estimating disease risk and elucidating disease biology. Nevertheless, their causal effects on human diseases have not been evaluated comprehensively. We performed two-sample Mendelian randomization to systematically infer the causal effects of 1,099 plasma metabolites measured in 6,136 Finnish men from the METSIM study on risk of 2,099 binary disease endpoints measured in 309,154 Finnish individuals from FinnGen. We identified evidence for 282 causal effects of 70 metabolites on 183 disease endpoints (FDR<1%). We found 25 metabolites with potential causal effects across multiple disease domains, including ascorbic acid 2-sulfate affecting 26 disease endpoints in 12 disease domains. Our study suggests that N-acetyl-2-aminooctanoate and glycocholenate sulfate affect risk of atrial fibrillation through two distinct metabolic pathways and that N-methylpipecolate may mediate the causal effect of N6, N6-dimethyllysine on anxious personality disorder. This study highlights the broad causal impact of plasma metabolites and widespread metabolic connections across diseases.
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