Moderate Folic Acid Supplementation in Pregnant Mice Results in Behavioral Alterations in Offspring with Sex-Specific Changes in Methyl Metabolism

Male folate Recommended Dietary Allowances Article 03 medical and health sciences Folic Acid choline Pregnancy Animals Maternal-Fetal Exchange phospholipids Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2) 2. Zero hunger Memory Disorders Sex Characteristics 0303 health sciences neurodevelopment Behavior, Animal Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Brain Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena Sphingomyelins 3. Good health Mice, Inbred C57BL Liver MTHFR Dietary Supplements Phosphatidylcholines Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena Female
DOI: 10.3390/nu12061716 Publication Date: 2020-06-09T08:19:39Z
ABSTRACT
Fifteen to 20% of pregnant women may exceed the recommended intake of folic acid (FA) by more than four-fold. This excess could compromise neurocognitive and motor development in offspring. Here, we explored the impact of an FA-supplemented diet (5× FASD, containing five-fold higher FA than recommended) during pregnancy on brain function in murine offspring, and elucidated mechanistic changes. We placed female C57BL/6 mice for one month on control diets or 5× FASD before mating. Diets were maintained throughout pregnancy and lactation. Behavioural tests were conducted on 3-week-old pups. Pups and mothers were sacrificed at weaning. Brains and livers were collected to examine choline/methyl metabolites and immunoreactive methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR). 5× FASD led to hyperactivity-like behavior and memory impairment in 3-week-old pups of both sexes. Reduced MTHFR protein in the livers of FASD mothers and male pups resulted in choline/methyl metabolite disruptions in offspring liver (decreased betaine) and brain (decreased glycerophosphocholine and sphingomyelin in male pups, and decreased phosphatidylcholine in both sexes). These results indicate that moderate folate supplementation downregulates MTHFR and alters choline/methyl metabolism, contributing to neurobehavioral alterations. Our findings support the negative impact of high FA on brain development, and may lead to improved guidelines on optimal folate levels during pregnancy.
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