Brown Alan S, Susser Ezra S
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York State Psychiatric Institute, Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
Schizophr Bull. 2008 Nov;34(6):1054-63. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbn096. Epub 2008 Aug 4.
Converging evidence suggests that a neurodevelopmental disruption plays a role in the vulnerability to schizophrenia. The authors review evidence supporting in utero exposure to nutritional deficiency as a determinant of schizophrenia. We first describe studies demonstrating that early gestational exposure to the Dutch Hunger Winter of 1944--1945 and to a severe famine in China are each associated with an increased risk of schizophrenia in offspring. The plausibility of several candidate micronutrients as potential risk factors for schizophrenia and the biological mechanisms that may underlie these associations are then reviewed. These nutrients include folate, essential fatty acids, retinoids, vitamin D, and iron. Following this discussion, we describe the methodology and results of an epidemiologic study based on a large birth cohort that has tested the association between prenatal homocysteine, an indicator of serum folate, and schizophrenia risk. The study capitalized on the use of archived prenatal serum specimens that make it possible to obtain direct, prospective biomarkers of prenatal insults, including levels of various nutrients during pregnancy. Finally, we discuss several strategies for subjecting the prenatal nutritional hypothesis of schizophrenia to further testing. These approaches include direct assessment of additional prenatal nutritional biomarkers in relation to schizophrenia in large birth cohorts, studies of epigenetic effects of prenatal starvation, association studies of genes relevant to folate and other micronutrient deficiencies, and animal models. Given the relatively high prevalence of nutritional deficiencies during pregnancy, this work has the potential to offer substantial benefits for the prevention of schizophrenia in the population.
越来越多的证据表明,神经发育障碍在精神分裂症易感性中起作用。作者回顾了支持子宫内暴露于营养缺乏是精神分裂症决定因素的证据。我们首先描述一些研究,这些研究表明,1944 - 1945年荷兰饥荒冬季以及中国的一场严重饥荒期间的早期孕期暴露,均与后代精神分裂症风险增加相关。然后回顾了几种候选微量营养素作为精神分裂症潜在风险因素的合理性以及这些关联可能潜在的生物学机制。这些营养素包括叶酸、必需脂肪酸、类视黄醇、维生素D和铁。在这一讨论之后,我们描述了一项基于大型出生队列的流行病学研究的方法和结果,该研究测试了血清叶酸指标——产前同型半胱氨酸与精神分裂症风险之间的关联。该研究利用存档的产前血清标本,得以获取产前损伤的直接、前瞻性生物标志物,包括孕期各种营养素的水平。最后,我们讨论了对精神分裂症产前营养假说进行进一步检验的几种策略。这些方法包括在大型出生队列中直接评估与精神分裂症相关的其他产前营养生物标志物、研究产前饥饿的表观遗传效应、与叶酸及其他微量营养素缺乏相关基因的关联研究以及动物模型。鉴于孕期营养缺乏的患病率相对较高,这项工作有可能为人群中精神分裂症的预防带来巨大益处。