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Study shows B vitamins are vital before conception
Mothers with low B vitamin levels before conceiving tend to have fatter male offspring at greater risk of high blood pressure, suggests new research with sheep.
Source: Nutraingredients.com Stephen Daniells Date: 12/07/07
The
findings are important for species with two legs, since the pre- and
post-natal development of sheep is approximately the same as humans,
state
the researchers in the prestigious journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
By depriving female sheep of vitamins
B12, folate and the amino acid methionine, researchers from the
University of Nottingham set about testing their hypothesis that this
could lead to changes to DNA in the pre-ovulatory egg or the embryo
before implantation in the uterus.
The importance of B vitamins,
particularly folate, in foetal development is well established. The new
study expands our understanding of the potential of pre-conception
diets to influence the health of offspring.
"The data
provide the first evidence that clinically relevant reductions in
specific dietary inputs to the methionine/folate cycles during the
periconceptional period can lead to widespread epigenetic alterations
to DNA methylation in offspring, and modify adult health-related
phenotypes," wrote lead author Kevin Sinclair.
The authors
explain that DNA methylation is key to the maintenance of gene
silencing. The process relies on a dietary supply of methyl groups, as
provided by B vitamins.
Fifty female sheep were split into two
groups, with half the sheep fed a balanced diet and the other half fed
a diet produce vitamin B deficiencies for eight weeks before artificial
insemination and six days after. Six days after insemination, Sinclair
and co-workers transferred the vitamin-deficient sheep's embryos to
sheep fed the balanced diet.
While no effects of this
intervention were the chances of conceiving or the birth weight of the
offspring, they did see effects when the offspring reached adulthood,
compared to offspring of mothers fed the balanced diet.
"This
modest early dietary intervention led to adult offspring that were both
heavier and fatter, elicited altered immune responses to antigenic
challenge, were insulin - resistant, and had elevated blood pressure -
effects that were most obvious in males," wrote Sinclair.
Indeed, the male offspring of B-deprived sheep were 25 per cent fatter than their controlled counterparts.
In
addition, an analysis of the DNA of the vitamin B-deprived offsprings
showed gene irregularities, which were again more pronounced in males.
Being
the first study to report these observations, and being based in
animals, further research is needed to explore the significance of
B-vitamins in the diet before conception.
Currently,
supplementation with folate and folic acid - the synthetic,
bioavailable form of folate - is recommended to all women of
child-bearing age since most neural tube defects (NTDs), including
spina bifida and anencephaly, occur within the first 22 to 28 days of
pregnancy, when the mother-to-be is not aware she is even pregnant.
Folic
acid supplements after this time are too late to prevent neural tube
defects and therefore fail to benefit women with unplanned pregnancies
- more than half of all pregnancies in the US.
This connection
between folate deficiency in early pregnancy and an increased risk of
NTDs led to the 1998 introduction of public health measures in the US
and Canada, where all grain products are fortified with folic acid.
While
preliminary evidence indicates that the measure is having an effect
with a reported 15 to 50 per cent reduction in NTD incidence, parallel
measures in European countries, including the UK and Ireland, are still
on the table.
Earlier this year an epidemiological study report
that high levels of vitamin B6 prior to falling pregnant may boost
conception rates and reduce the odds of losing the baby during early
pregnancy (American Journal of Epidemiolog, Vol. 166, pp 304-312).
Source: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 4 December 2007, Volume 104, Number 49, Pages 19351-19356 "DNA
methylation, insulin resistance, and blood pressure in offspring
determined by maternal periconceptional B vitamin and methionine
status," Authors: Kevin D. Sinclair, C. Allegrucci, R. Singh,
D.S. Gardner, S. Sebastian, J. Bispham, A. Thurston, J.F. Huntley, W.D.
Rees, C.A. Maloney, R.G. Lea, J. Craigon, T.G. McEvoy, L.E. Young
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
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