Crawford M A, Bloom M, Broadhurst C L, Schmidt W F, Cunnane S C, Galli C, Gehbremeskel K, Linseisen F, Lloyd-Smith J, Parkington J
Institute of Brain Chemistry, London, United Kingdom.
Lipids. 1999;34 Suppl:S39-47. doi: 10.1007/BF02562227.
The African savanna ecosystem of the large mammals and primates was associated with a dramatic decline in relative brain capacity associated with little docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), which is required for brain structures and growth. The biochemistry implies that the expansion of the human brain required a plentiful source of preformed DHA. The richest source of DHA is the marine food chain, while the savanna environment offers very little of it. Consequently Homo sapiens could not have evolved on the savannas. Recent fossil evidence indicates that the lacustrine and marine food chain was being extensively exploited at the time cerebral expansion took place and suggests the alternative that the transition from the archaic to modern humans took place at the land/water interface. Contemporary data on tropical lakeshore dwellers reaffirm the above view with nutritional support for the vascular system, the development of which would have been a prerequisite for cerebral expansion. Both arachidonic acid and DHA would have been freely available from such habitats providing the double stimulus of preformed acyl components for the developing blood vessels and brain. The n-3 docosapentaenoic acid precursor (n-3 DPA) was the major n-3-metabolite in the savanna mammals. Despite this abundance, neither it nor the corresponding n-6 DPA was used for the photoreceptor nor the synapse. A substantial difference between DHA and other fatty acids is required to explain this high specificity. Studies on fluidity and other mechanical features of cell membranes did not reveal a difference of such magnitude between even alpha-linolenic acid and DHA sufficient to explain the exclusive use of DHA. We suggest that the evolution of the large human brain depended on a rich source of DHA from the land/water interface. We review a number of proposals for the possible influence of DHA on physical properties of the brain that are essential for its function.
大型哺乳动物和灵长类动物所处的非洲稀树草原生态系统,与相对脑容量的急剧下降有关,这与二十二碳六烯酸(DHA)含量极少有关,而DHA是脑结构和生长所必需的。生物化学表明,人类大脑的扩张需要大量现成的DHA来源。DHA最丰富的来源是海洋食物链,而稀树草原环境中提供的DHA却很少。因此,智人不可能在稀树草原上进化。最近的化石证据表明,在大脑扩张发生时,湖泊和海洋食物链正被广泛利用,并暗示了从古代人类向现代人类的转变发生在陆地/水域界面的可能性。关于热带湖滨居民的当代数据再次证实了上述观点,即对血管系统有营养支持作用,而血管系统的发育本应是大脑扩张的一个先决条件。花生四烯酸和DHA都可以从这样的栖息地中自由获取,为发育中的血管和大脑提供现成的酰基成分的双重刺激。n-3二十二碳五烯酸前体(n-3 DPA)是稀树草原哺乳动物中的主要n-3代谢物。尽管含量丰富,但它和相应的n-6 DPA都未被用于光感受器或突触。需要DHA与其他脂肪酸之间存在实质性差异才能解释这种高特异性。对细胞膜流动性和其他机械特性的研究并未揭示即使是α-亚麻酸和DHA之间存在足以解释DHA被排他性使用的如此大的差异。我们认为,人类大脑的进化依赖于来自陆地/水域界面的丰富DHA来源。我们回顾了一些关于DHA对大脑功能所必需的物理特性可能产生影响的提议。