PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How breast milk boosts the brain

A sugar molecule in human breast milk may be essential to the health of developing and aging brains, according to a Tufts University-led team of researchers

2023-07-28
(Press-News.org) A new study by scientists at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University suggests that a micronutrient in human breast milk provides significant benefit to the developing brains of newborns, a finding that further illuminates the link between nutrition and brain health and could help improve infant formulas used in circumstances when breastfeeding isn’t possible.

The study, published July 11 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS),  also paves the way to study what role this micronutrient might play in the brain as we age.

Researchers found that the micronutrient, a sugar molecule called myo-inositol, was most prominent in human breast milk during the first months of lactation, when neuronal connections termed synapses are forming rapidly in the infant brain. This was true regardless of the mother’s ethnicity or background; the researchers profiled and compared human milk samples collected across sites in Mexico City, Shanghai, and Cincinnati by the Global Exploration of Human Milk study, which included healthy mothers of term singleton infants.

Further testing using rodent models as well as human neurons showed that myo-inositol increased both the size and number of synaptic connections between neurons in the developing brain, indicating stronger connectivity.

“Forming and refining brain connectivity from birth is guided by genetic and environmental forces as well as by human experiences,” says Thomas Biederer, senior scientist on the Neuroscience and Aging Team at the HNRCA, senior author on the study, and faculty member at the Yale School of Medicine, where he leads a research group in the Department of Neurology.

Diet is one of the environmental forces that offers many opportunities for study. In early infancy, the brain may be particularly sensitive to dietary factors because the blood-brain barrier is more permeable, and small molecules taken in as food can more easily pass from the blood to the brain.

“As a neuroscientist, it’s intriguing to me how profound the effects of micronutrients are on the brain,” says Biederer. “It’s also amazing how complex and rich human breast milk is, and I now think it is conceivable that its composition is dynamically changing to support different stages of infant brain development.”

Similar levels of myo-inositol across women in very different geographic locations point to its generally important role in human brain development, he observes.

Research by others has shown that brain inositol levels decline over time as infants develop. In adults, lower than normal brain inositol levels have been found in patients with major depressive disorders and bipolar disease. Genetic alterations in myo-inositol transporters have been linked to schizophrenia. In contrast, in people with Down’s syndrome and patients with Alzheimer’s disease and Down’s syndrome, higher than normal accumulations of myo-inositol have been identified.

“The current research does indicate that for circumstances where breastfeeding is not possible, it may be beneficial to increase the levels of myo-inositol in infant formula,” Biederer says.

However, Biederer says it is too soon to recommend that adults consume more myo-inositol, which can be found in significant quantities in certain grains, beans, bran, citrus fruits, and cantaloupe (but which is not present in great quantities in cow’s milk). “We don’t know why inositol levels are lower in adults with certain psychiatric conditions, or higher in those with certain other diseases,” he says.

A host of research questions remain: Are lower inositol levels in people with depression or bipolar disease a cause of those diseases, or a side effect of drugs used to treat them? Do higher than normal levels in people with Down’s syndrome and Alzheimer’s disease suggest that too much myo-inositol is problematic? What is the “right” level of myo-inositol to have in one’s brain for optimal brain health at various stages of life?

“My colleagues at the HNRCA and I are now pursuing research to test how micronutrients like myo-inositol may impact cells and connectivity in the aging brain,” says Biederer. “We hope this work leads to a better understanding of how dietary factors interplay with age-related brain aberrations.”

This work was supported by Reckitt Benckiser / Mead Johnson Nutrition and a gift from the Robert and Margaret Patricelli Family Foundation. Complete information on authors, funders, methodology, and conflicts of interest is available in the published paper.

The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of Reckitt Benckiser / Mead Johnson Nutrition or the Robert and Margaret Patricelli Family Foundation.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study findings underscore the importance of timely newborn screenings in early care for cystic fibrosis

New study findings underscore the importance of timely newborn screenings in early care for cystic fibrosis
2023-07-28
Aurora, Colo. (July 28, 2023) – The Journal of Pediatrics has published a manuscript by Stacey Martiniano, MD, pulmonary specialist at Children’s Hospital Colorado and associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado. Dr. Martiniano was primary author on the study titled, Late Diagnosis in the Era of Universal Newborn Screening Negatively Effects Short- and Long-Term Growth and Health Outcomes in Infants with Cystic Fibrosis. The manuscript’s senior author was Susanna McColley, MD, professor of pediatrics in pulmonary and sleep medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg ...

Royal Society of Chemistry honors Hong with fellow selection

Royal Society of Chemistry honors Hong with fellow selection
2023-07-28
The Royal Society of Chemistry has named Yi Hong, a distinguished university professor of bioengineering at The University of Texas at Arlington, as a fellow. Hong said he was honored by the selection. “Chemistry is amazing because it helps to create many new biomedical materials for human health and life saving,” Hong said. “This recognition encourages me not only to invent more creative biomaterials through chemical design for disease treatment, but also to be a role model to our next generation of scientists and engineers ...

Astronomers shed new light on formation of mysterious fast radio bursts

Astronomers shed new light on formation of mysterious fast radio bursts
2023-07-28
More than 15 years after the discovery of fast radio bursts (FRBs) – millisecond-long, deep-space cosmic explosions of electromagnetic radiation – astronomers worldwide have been combing the universe to uncover clues about how and why they form.  Nearly all FRBs identified have originated in deep space outside our Milky Way galaxy. That is until April 2020, when the first Galactic FRB, named FRB 20200428, was detected. This FRB was produced by a magnetar (SGR J1935+2154), a dense, city-sized neutron star with an incredibly powerful magnetic field.  This groundbreaking discovery led some to believe that FRBs identified at cosmological distances outside ...

Texas Tech physicist lands NSF grant

2023-07-28
Myoung-Hwan Kim, an assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Texas Tech University, has been awarded a National Science Foundation grant in the field of materials research (DMR) related to quantum information science (QIS). An emerging field of research, QIS involves studying the transmission of information through quantum mechanics principles. Kim’s research will examine the influence of magnetism and topology on quantum particles delivering information. Kin’s award is one of two Texas Tech recently received from the NSF for QIS research. The other was awarded to Lu Wei, an assistant professor in the Department of Computer ...

Study looks at Achilles' heel of insulin pump technology

2023-07-28
Since the insulin pump started widespread use in the early 1980s, it’s become the option of choice for type 1 diabetes patients to manage their glucose levels in a way that doesn’t require testing their blood sugar and injecting insulin multiple times daily. But now, a first-of-its kind study is looking at the issue of patients “running out of real estate” due to pump sites becoming fibrotic, irritated and less effective at delivering insulin. The UW Medicine-led study was published July 14 in the journal Diabetes Care, a publication of the American Diabetes Association. “No ...

New study finding underscore the importance of timely newborn screenings in early care for cystic fibrosis

New study finding underscore the importance of timely newborn screenings in early care for cystic fibrosis
2023-07-28
Aurora, Colo. (July 28, 2023) – The Journal of Pediatrics has published a manuscript by Stacey Martiniano, MD, pulmonary specialist at Children’s Hospital Colorado and associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado. Dr. Martiniano was primary author on the study titled, Late Diagnosis in the Era of Universal Newborn Screening Negatively Effects Short- and Long-Term Growth and Health Outcomes in Infants with Cystic Fibrosis. The manuscript’s senior author was Susanna McColley, MD, professor of pediatrics in pulmonary and sleep medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital ...

New study finds the prealbumin gene alone is insufficient for diagnosis of heart failure

2023-07-28
BOSTON - A new multi-center study led by doctors at Boston Medical Center and Columbia University found that having a genetic variant in the prealbumin gene alone is not sufficient for diagnosis of transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy in older Black patients. Published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, researchers discovered that a blood test that measures the transthyretin or prealbumin protein might also be helpful in diagnosing transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy and could be used to trigger more definitive imaging testing. Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR‐CM) is an underdiagnosed cause of congestive heart failure among patients 60+ years of age. ...

A wearable ultrasound scanner could detect breast cancer earlier

A wearable ultrasound scanner could detect breast cancer earlier
2023-07-28
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- When breast cancer is diagnosed in the earliest stages, the survival rate is nearly 100 percent. However, for tumors detected in later stages, that rate drops to around 25 percent. In hopes of improving the overall survival rate for breast cancer patients, MIT researchers have designed a wearable ultrasound device that could allow people to detect tumors when they are still in early stages. In particular, it could be valuable for patients at high risk of developing breast cancer in between ...

Mutation accessibility fuels influenza evolution

Mutation accessibility fuels influenza evolution
2023-07-28
(Memphis, Tenn.—July 28, 2023) The influenza (flu) virus is constantly undergoing a process of evolution and adaptation through acquiring new mutations. Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital have added a new layer of understanding to explain why and how flu viruses change. The “survival of the accessible” model provides a complementary view to the more widely recognized “survival of the fittest” way of evolving. The work was published today in Science Advances.     Viruses undergo a rapid evolutionary flux due to constant genetic mutations. This rapid flux is why people get a flu shot ...

Billions in conservation spending fail to improve wild fish stocks in Columbia Basin

Billions in conservation spending fail to improve wild fish stocks in Columbia Basin
2023-07-28
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Four decades of conservation spending totaling more than $9 billion in inflation-adjusted tax dollars has failed to improve stocks of wild salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River Basin, according to Oregon State University research. The study led by William Jaeger of the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences is based on an analysis of 50 years of data suggesting that while hatchery-reared salmon numbers have increased, there is no evidence of a net increase in wild, naturally spawning salmon and steelhead.  Findings were published today in PLOS One. Jaeger, a professor of applied economics, notes that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Protecting confidentiality in adolescent patient portals

Gatling conducting digitization project

Regenstrief researcher awarded $1.9 million CDC grant

Independent expert report: The Human Brain Project significantly advanced neuroscience

Wu conducting molecular modeling of DR domain of HIV restriction factor PSGL-1

Nguyen working to make complex invariants accessible

Menstrual cycle luteal phase lengths are not 'fixed' at 13-14 days

Should men and women eat different breakfasts to lose weight?

SwRI’s Nathan Andrews named AIAA Associate Fellow

Invasive populations of tiger mosquitoes continuously expand the diversity of hosts in their blood-meal

After injury, these comb jellies can fuse to become one

Whale shark shipping collisions may increase as oceans warm

Despite medical advances, life expectancy gains are slowing

Johns Hopkins Medicine study finds commonly used arm positions can substantially overestimate blood pressure readings

Arm position and blood pressure readings

Longitudinal changes in epigenetic age acceleration across childhood and adolescence

An early blood test can predict survival in patients with metastatic prostate cancer, shows USC study

Scientists discover that special immune cells stop metastatic cancer

Cancer biologists discover a new mechanism for an old drug

Food deserts, limited access to transportation linked to more complications among preschool children with SCD

Space oddity: Most distant rotating disc galaxy found

How a common economic theory could help save endangered frogs

Stopping off-the-wall behavior in fusion reactors

Real-time cancer diagnostics and therapy through theranostics

Researchers confront new US and global challenges in vaccinations of adults

NCSA building stronger connections among observatories, astronomers

Latest advances in brain network models for medical applications: A comprehensive review highlights future potential

Jefferson Lab physicists named APS Fellows

Bias found when drug manufacturers fund clinical trials

The University of Texas at San Antonio is advancing space exploration as the lead of a multimillion-dollar DOE project

[Press-News.org] How breast milk boosts the brain
A sugar molecule in human breast milk may be essential to the health of developing and aging brains, according to a Tufts University-led team of researchers