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Short-term supplementation of DHA as phospholipids rather than triglycerides improve cognitive deficits induced by maternal omega-3 PUFA deficiency during the late postnatal stage

Min Wen, Ying‐Cai Zhao, Haohao Shi, Chengcheng Wang, Tiantian Zhang, Yuming Wang, Changhu Xue

2020Food & Function31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Cognitive deficiencies, which are caused by maternal omega-3 PUFA deficiency (O-3 Def), are likely to be more rapidly and easily reversed at younger ages with quicker DHA reversal. This study aims to compare the efficiency of short-term supplementation of DHA in the form of phospholipids (PL) and triglycerides (TG) and improve cognitive deficiency in the O-3 Def model during different periods of brain development (3-week and 7-week old). The animal's spatial task performance, brain PUFA concentration, histopathology, and expression of synapse-associated proteins in the hippocampus were then analyzed. We demonstrate here that DHA-PL shows improved efficiency in improving cognitive deficiency compared to DHA-TG, particularly for adult O-3 Def offspring. The superiority of DHA-PL also correlates with the specific elevation of synapse-associated proteins, including BDNF, DCX, GAP-43, Syn, and PSD95, except to higher brain DHA accretion. This work highlights the DHA-PL as a better DHA supplement for inferior brain development caused by maternal O-3 Def, especially regarding those who missed the optimal time window of neurodevelopment.

Topics & Concepts

Polyunsaturated fatty acidDocosahexaenoic acidEndocrinologyOmega 3 fatty acidInternal medicineOmegaCognitionStage (stratigraphy)BiologyMedicineBiochemistryFatty acidNeurosciencePaleontologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsFatty Acid Research and HealthBirth, Development, and HealthNeonatal Respiratory Health Research