Powers Brian E, Velazquez Ramon, Strawderman Myla S, Ginsberg Stephen D, Mufson Elliott J, Strupp Barbara J
Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States.
Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital, Hines, IL, United States.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2021 Oct 6;13:723046. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.723046. eCollection 2021.
Maternal choline supplementation (MCS) has emerged as a promising therapy to lessen the cognitive and affective dysfunction associated with Down syndrome (DS). Choline is an essential nutrient, especially important during pregnancy due to its wide-ranging ontogenetic roles. Using the Ts65Dn mouse model of DS, our group has demonstrated that supplementing the maternal diet with additional choline (4-5 × standard levels) during pregnancy and lactation improves spatial cognition, attention, and emotion regulation in the adult offspring. The behavioral benefits were associated with a rescue of septohippocampal circuit atrophy. These results have been replicated across a series of independent studies, although the magnitude of the cognitive benefit has varied. We hypothesized that this was due, at least in part, to differences in the age of the subjects at the time of testing. Here, we present new data that compares the effects of MCS on the attentional function of adult Ts65Dn offspring, which began testing at two different ages (6 vs. 12 months of age). These data replicate and extend the results of our previous reports, showing a clear pattern indicating that MCS has beneficial effects in Ts65Dn offspring throughout life, but that the magnitude of the benefit (relative to non-supplemented offspring) diminishes with aging, possibly because of the onset of Alzheimer's disease-like neuropathology. In light of growing evidence that increased maternal choline intake during pregnancy is beneficial to the cognitive and affective functioning of all offspring (e.g., neurotypical and DS), the addition of this nutrient to a prenatal vitamin regimen would be predicted to have population-wide benefits and provide early intervention for fetuses with DS, notably including babies born to mothers unaware that they are carrying a fetus with DS.
母体补充胆碱(MCS)已成为一种有前景的疗法,可减轻与唐氏综合征(DS)相关的认知和情感功能障碍。胆碱是一种必需营养素,由于其在个体发育过程中具有广泛作用,在孕期尤为重要。利用DS的Ts65Dn小鼠模型,我们团队已证明,在怀孕和哺乳期间给母体饮食额外补充胆碱(4 - 5倍标准水平)可改善成年后代的空间认知、注意力和情绪调节能力。行为学上的益处与海马隔区回路萎缩的改善有关。这些结果在一系列独立研究中得到了重复,尽管认知益处的程度有所不同。我们推测,这至少部分是由于测试时受试者年龄的差异。在此,我们展示了新的数据,比较了MCS对成年Ts65Dn后代注意力功能的影响,这些后代在两个不同年龄(6个月和12个月)开始测试。这些数据重复并扩展了我们之前报告的结果,显示出一种清晰的模式,即MCS对Ts65Dn后代一生都有有益影响,但益处的程度(相对于未补充的后代)会随着年龄增长而降低,这可能是由于类似阿尔茨海默病的神经病理学的出现。鉴于越来越多的证据表明孕期增加母体胆碱摄入量对所有后代(如神经正常和DS后代)的认知和情感功能有益,预计在产前维生素方案中添加这种营养素将对整个人口有益,并为患有DS的胎儿提供早期干预,特别是包括那些母亲在不知情的情况下怀有患有DS胎儿的婴儿。