Vancamp Pieter, Frapin Morgane, Parnet Patricia, Amarger Valérie
Nantes Université, Institut National de Recherche pour l'Agriculture, l'alimentation et l'Environnement, UMR1280, Physiopathologie des Adaptations Nutritionnelles, l'Institut des Maladies de l'Appareil Digestif, Nantes, France.
Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci. 2024 Jun 3;4(5):100339. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsgos.2024.100339. eCollection 2024 Sep.
Fetal brain development requires increased maternal protein intake to ensure that offspring reach their optimal cognitive potential in infancy and adulthood. While protein deficiency remains a prevalent issue in developing countries, it is also reemerging in Western societies due to the growing adoption of plant-based diets, some of which are monotonous and may fail to provide sufficient amino acids crucial for the brain's critical developmental phase. Confounding variables in human nutritional research have impeded our understanding of the precise impact of protein deficiency on fetal neurodevelopment, as well as its implications for childhood neurocognitive performance. Moreover, it remains unclear whether such deficiency could predispose to mental health problems in adulthood, mirroring observations in individuals exposed to prenatal famine. In this review, we sought to evaluate mechanistic data derived from rodent models, placing special emphasis on the involvement of neuroendocrine axes, the influence of sex and timing, epigenetic modifications, and cellular metabolism. Despite notable progress, critical knowledge gaps remain, including understanding the long-term reversibility of effects due to fetal protein restriction and the interplay between genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Enhancing our understanding of the precise mechanisms that connect prenatal nutrition to brain development in future research endeavors can be significantly advanced by integrating multiomics approaches and utilizing additional alternative models such as nonhuman primates. Furthermore, it is crucial to investigate potential interventions aimed at alleviating adverse outcomes. Ultimately, this research has profound implications for guiding public health strategies aimed at raising awareness about the crucial role of optimal maternal nutrition in supporting fetal neurodevelopment.
胎儿大脑发育需要增加母体蛋白质摄入量,以确保后代在婴儿期和成年期达到最佳认知潜能。虽然蛋白质缺乏在发展中国家仍然是一个普遍问题,但在西方社会也再度出现,原因是越来越多的人采用植物性饮食,其中一些饮食种类单一,可能无法提供对大脑关键发育阶段至关重要的足够氨基酸。人类营养研究中的混杂变量阻碍了我们对蛋白质缺乏对胎儿神经发育的确切影响及其对儿童神经认知表现的影响的理解。此外,目前尚不清楚这种缺乏是否会像在产前遭受饥荒的个体中观察到的那样,使成年后患心理健康问题的风险增加。在这篇综述中,我们试图评估来自啮齿动物模型的机制数据,特别强调神经内分泌轴的参与、性别和时间的影响、表观遗传修饰以及细胞代谢。尽管取得了显著进展,但关键的知识空白仍然存在,包括了解胎儿蛋白质限制所产生影响的长期可逆性以及遗传易感性与环境因素之间的相互作用。通过整合多组学方法并利用非人类灵长类动物等其他替代模型,在未来的研究工作中可以显著推进我们对将产前营养与大脑发育联系起来的精确机制的理解。此外,研究旨在减轻不良后果的潜在干预措施至关重要。最终,这项研究对于指导公共卫生策略具有深远意义,这些策略旨在提高人们对最佳母体营养在支持胎儿神经发育中的关键作用的认识。