#0128
Blood Metabolites as Mediators in Erectile Dysfunction: Insights from a Multi-Center Proteomics and Genetic Study
J. Chen1, S. Fu1, H. Wang1, J. Zuo1, H. Shi1, J. Yao2, J. Zhao2
1The
Second Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University, urology, KunMing,
China
2920th Hospital of Joint Logistics Support Force of Chinese People's
Liberation Army, urology, kunming, China
Introduction:
This study investigates circulating proteins causally linked to erectile dysfunction (ED) using Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis, with a focus on metabolic mediation and drug discovery.
Material and methods:
Large-scale two-sample MR and colocalization analyses were conducted using proteomics data (Olink and deCODE) as exposures and FinnGen data as outcomes. Mediation MR explored interactions between 1,400 blood metabolites and five identified proteins. Functional analyses included pathway enrichment, druggability assessments, and molecular docking.
Results:
Five proteins (AMN, ESM1, KIR2DL2, PIGR, TNFRSF6B) were identified and validated. Mediation MR revealed that 1-palmitoyl-2-linoleoyl-GPC promotes AMN expression, exacerbating ED, while N-formylmethionine and glycine-to-serine ratio reduce ED risk via ESM1. Stearoyl sphingomyelin enhances TNFRSF6B’s protective effect on ED. Drug-target analysis identified chlortetracycline (AMN), retinoic acid (ESM1), clopamide (KIR2DL2), and isoguanine (PIGR) as potential therapeutic candidates, with molecular docking confirming strong binding affinities.