4.7 Article

Methionine Diet Evoked Hyperhomocysteinemia Causes Hippocampal Alterations, Metabolomics Plasma Changes and Behavioral Pattern in Wild Type Rats

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22094961

Keywords

methionine diet; hyperhomocysteinemia; morris water maze; neurodegeneration; wild-type rats

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education of the Slovak Republic [VEGA 1/0171/18, VEGA 1/0230/20, APVV 15/0107]
  2. project Identification of novel markers in diagnostic panel of neurological diseases [26220220114]
  3. EU
  4. European Regional Development Fund
  5. Ministry of Health of the Slovak Republic

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This study induced mild hyperhomocysteinemia in adult male Wistar rats using a diet enriched with L-methionine, leading to alterations in plasma metabolome, behavioral patterns, and histomorphological changes in the vulnerable hippocampal CA 1 area. The results suggest that mild hyperhomocysteinemia can have negative effects on nervous tissue, likely due to the changes induced by high methionine intake.
L-methionine, an essential amino acid, plays a critical role in cell physiology. High intake and/or dysregulation in methionine (Met) metabolism results in accumulation of its intermediate(s) or breakdown products in plasma, including homocysteine (Hcy). High level of Hcy in plasma, hyperhomocysteinemia (hHcy), is considered to be an independent risk factor for cerebrovascular diseases, stroke and dementias. To evoke a mild hHcy in adult male Wistar rats we used an enriched Met diet at a dose of 2 g/kg of animal weight/day in duration of 4 weeks. The study contributes to the exploration of the impact of Met enriched diet inducing mild hHcy on nervous tissue by detecting the histo-morphological, metabolomic and behavioural alterations. We found an altered plasma metabolomic profile, modified spatial and learning memory acquisition as well as remarkable histo-morphological changes such as a decrease in neurons' vitality, alterations in the morphology of neurons in the selective vulnerable hippocampal CA 1 area of animals treated with Met enriched diet. Results of these approaches suggest that the mild hHcy alters plasma metabolome and behavioural and histo-morphological patterns in rats, likely due to the potential Met induced changes in methylation index of hippocampal brain area, which eventually aggravates the noxious effect of high methionine intake.

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