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Paul Thompson, UCLA:
Diet counts: Iron intake in teen years can impact brain in later life
January 24, 2012
Iron
is a popular topic in health news. Doctors prescribe it for medical
reasons, and it's available over the counter as a dietary supplement.
And while it's known that too little iron can result in cognitive
problems, it's also known that too much promotes neurodegenerative
diseases. Now,
researchers at UCLA have found that in addition to causing cognitive
problems, a lack of iron early in life can affect the brain's physical
structure as well.
UCLA neurology professor Paul Thompson and his colleagues measured
levels of transferrin, a protein that transports iron throughout the
body and brain, in adolescents and discovered that these transferrin
levels were related to detectable differences in both the brain's
macro-structure and micro-structure when the adolescents reached young
adulthood.
The researchers also identified a common set of genes that influences
both transferrin levels and brain structure. The discovery may shed
light on the neural mechanisms by which iron affects cognition,
neurodevelopment and neurodegeneration, they said.
Their findings appear in the current online edition of the journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Iron and the proteins that transport it are critically important for
brain function. Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional
deficiency worldwide, causing poor cognitive achievement in school-aged
children. Yet later in life, iron overload is associated with damage to
the brain, and abnormally high iron concentrations have been found in
the brains of patients with Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington
diseases.
Since both a deficiency and an excess of iron can negatively impact
brain function, the body's regulation of iron transport to the brain is
crucial. When iron levels are low, the liver produces more transferrin
for increased iron transport. The researchers wanted to know whether
brain structure in healthy adults was also dependent on transferrin
levels.
"We found that healthy brain wiring in adults depended on having good
iron levels in your teenage years," said Thompson, a member of UCLA's
Laboratory of Neuro Imaging. "This connection was a lot stronger than we
expected, especially as we were looking at people who were young and
healthy — none of them would be considered iron-deficient.
"We also found a connection with a gene that explains why this is so.
The gene itself seems to affect brain wiring, which was a big surprise,"
he said.
To assess brain volume and integrity, Thompson's team collected brain
MRI scans on 615 healthy young-adult twins and siblings, who had an
average age of 23. Of these subjects, 574 were also scanned with a type
of MRI called a "diffusion scan," which maps the brain's myelin
connections and their strength, or integrity. Myelin is the fatty sheath
that coats the brain's nerve axons, allowing for efficient conduction of
nerve impulses, and iron plays a key role in myelin production.
Eight to 12 years before the current imaging study, researchers measured
the subjects' blood transferrin levels. They hoped to determine whether
iron availability in the developmentally crucial period of adolescence
impacted the organization of the brain later in life.
"Adolescence is a period of high vulnerability to brain insults, and the
brain is still very actively developing," Thompson said.
By averaging the subjects' transferrin levels, which had been assessed
repeatedly — at 12, 14 and 16 years of age — the researchers estimated
iron availability to the brain during adolescence, he said.
The team discovered that subjects who had elevated transferrin levels —
a common sign of poor iron levels in a person's diet — had structural
changes in brain regions that are vulnerable to neurodegeneration. And
further analyses of the twins in the study revealed that a common set of
genes influences both transferrin levels and brain structure.
One of the genetic links — a specific variation in a gene called HFE,
which is known to influence blood transferrin levels — was associated
with increased brain-fiber integrity, although subjects without this
gene variant did not show any symptoms of disease or cognitive
impairment.
"So this is one of the deep secrets of the brain," Thompson said. "You
wouldn't think the iron in our diet would affect the brain so much in
our teen years. But it turns out that it matters very much. Because
myelin speeds your brain's communications, and iron is vital for making
myelin, poor iron levels in childhood erode your brain reserves which
you need later in life to protect against aging and Alzheimer's.
"This is remarkable, as we were not studying iron deficient people, just
around 600 normal healthy people. It underscores the need for a balanced
diet in the teenage years, when your brain's command center is still
actively maturing. "
The
findings, he said, may aid future studies of how iron transport affects
brain function, development and the risk of neurodegeneration.
Other authors on the study included first author Neda Jahanshad, Omid
Kohannim, Derrek P. Hibar, Jason L. Stein and Arthur W. Toga, all of
UCLA; Katie L. McMahon and Greig I. de Zubicaray of the University of
Queensland in Brisbane, Australia; and Sarah E. Medlande, Grant W.
Montgomerye, John B. Whitfielde, Nick G. Martine and Margie J. Wright of
the Queensland Institute of Medical Research in Herston, Australia.
The research was supported by the National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development; Australia's National Health and Medical Research
Council; the Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation; the
National Institute of Mental Health; and the Australian Research Council
Future Fellowship. |