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The human milk component myo-inositol promotes neuronal connectivity.


ABSTRACT: Effects of micronutrients on brain connectivity are incompletely understood. Analyzing human milk samples across global populations, we identified the carbocyclic sugar myo-inositol as a component that promotes brain development. We determined that it is most abundant in human milk during early lactation when neuronal connections rapidly form in the infant brain. Myo-inositol promoted synapse abundance in human excitatory neurons as well as cultured rat neurons and acted in a dose-dependent manner. Mechanistically, myo-inositol enhanced the ability of neurons to respond to transsynaptic interactions that induce synapses. Effects of myo-inositol in the developing brain were tested in mice, and its dietary supplementation enlarged excitatory postsynaptic sites in the maturing cortex. Utilizing an organotypic slice culture system, we additionally determined that myo-inositol is bioactive in mature brain tissue, and treatment of organotypic slices with this carbocyclic sugar increased the number and size of postsynaptic specializations and excitatory synapse density. This study advances our understanding of the impact of human milk on the infant brain and identifies myo-inositol as a breast milk component that promotes the formation of neuronal connections.

SUBMITTER: Paquette AF 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10374161 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The human milk component <i>myo</i>-inositol promotes neuronal connectivity.

Paquette Andrew F AF   Carbone Beatrice E BE   Vogel Seth S   Israel Erica E   Maria Sarah D SD   Patil Nikita P NP   Sah Saroj S   Chowdhury Dhrubajyoti D   Kondratiuk Ilona I   Labhart Beau B   Morrow Ardythe L AL   Phillips Shay C SC   Kuang Chenzhong C   Hondmann Dirk D   Pandey Neeraj N   Biederer Thomas T  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20230711 30


Effects of micronutrients on brain connectivity are incompletely understood. Analyzing human milk samples across global populations, we identified the carbocyclic sugar <i>myo</i>-inositol as a component that promotes brain development. We determined that it is most abundant in human milk during early lactation when neuronal connections rapidly form in the infant brain. <i>Myo</i>-inositol promoted synapse abundance in human excitatory neurons as well as cultured rat neurons and acted in a dose-  ...[more]

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