Maternal dietary deficiencies in folic acid and choline change metabolites levels in offspring after ischemic stroke

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Maternal dietary deficiencies in folic acid and choline change metabolites levels in offspring after ischemic stroke

Authors

Anwar, F.; Mosley, M.-T.; Jasbi, P.; Chi, J.; Gu, H.; Jadavji, N. M.

Abstract

Ischemic stroke is a debilitating disease, with nutrition being a modifiable risk factor. Changes in levels of metabolites can be used to measure the alterations in the gut, a significant marker for the etiology of diseases. This study utilized untargeted metabolomics to investigate changes in fecal samples of offspring in response to maternal dietary deficiencies and ischemic stroke. Female mice were placed on control (CD), folic acid- (FADD), or choline-deficient (ChDD) diets prior to, during pregnancy, and lactation. Offspring were weaned on to CD and at 2 months of age an ischemic stroke was induced. Fecal samples were collected prior to ischemic stroke, and at 1- and 4-weeks post-stroke for analysis. Sex and maternal dietary differences in metabolites were observed at both the 1- and 4-week post-stroke timepoints. At the 1-week post-stroke, female FADD offspring had more changes in metabolites than males. Comparatively, at the 4-week post-stroke timepoint, female offspring on either FADD or ChDD demonstrated metabolite changes. This study demonstrates a long-lasting impact of maternal dietary deficiencies on central nervous system and gut microbiome function after ischemic stroke.

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