Literature DB >> 22544773

The role of docosahexaenoic and the marine food web as determinants of evolution and hominid brain development: the challenge for human sustainability.

Michael A Crawford1, C Leigh Broadhurst.   

Abstract

Life originated on this planet about 3 billion years ago. For the first 2.5 billion years of life there was ample opportunity for DNA modification. Yet there is no evidence of significant change in life forms during that time. It was not until about 600 million years ago, when the oxygen tension rose to a point where air-breathing life forms became thermodynamically possible, that a major change can be abruptly seen in the fossil record. The sudden appearance of the 32 phyla in the Cambrian fossil record was also associated with the appearance of intracellular detail not seen in previous life forms. That detail was provided by cell membranes made with lipids (membrane fats) as structural essentials. Lipids thus played a major, as yet unrecognised, role as determinants in evolution. The compartmentalisation of intracellular, specialist functions as in the nucleus, mitochondria, reticulo-endothelial system and plasma membrane led to cellular specialisation and then speciation. Thus, not only oxygen but also the marine lipids were drivers in the Cambrian explosion. Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) (all-cis-docosa-4,7,10,13,16,19-hexaenoic acid, C22:6ω3 or C22:6, n-3, DHA) is a major feature of marine lipids. It requires six oxygen atoms to insert its six double bonds, so it would not have been abundant before oxidative metabolism became plentiful. DHA provided the membrane backbone for the emergence of new photoreceptors that converted photons into electricity, laying the foundation for the evolution of other signalling systems, the nervous system and the brain. Hence, the ω3 DHA from the marine food web must have played a critical role in human evolution. There is also clear evidence from molecular biology that DHA is a determinant of neuronal migration, neurogenesis and the expression of several genes involved in brain growth and function. That same process was essential to the ultimate cerebral expansion in human evolution. There is now incontrovertible support of this hypothesis from fossil evidence of human evolution taking advantage of the marine food web. Lipids are still modifying the present evolutionary phase of our species; their signature is evident in the changing panorama of non-communicable diseases. The most worrying change in disease pattern is the sharp rise in brain disorders, which, in the European Union, has overtaken the cost of all other burdens of ill health at €386 billion for the 25 member states at 2004 prices. In 2007, the UK cost was estimated at £77 billion and confirmed in 2010 at £105 billion - greater than heart disease and cancer combined. The rise in mental ill health is now being globalised. The solution to the rising vascular disorders in the last century and now brain disorders in this century lies in a radical reappraisal of the food system, which last century was focussed on protein and calories, with little attention paid to the requirements of the brain - the very organ that was the determinant of human evolution. With the marine fish catch having plateaued 20 years ago and its sustainability now under threat, a critical aspect of this revision is the development of marine agriculture from estuarine, coastal and oceanic resources. Such action is likely to play a key role in future health and intelligence.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22544773     DOI: 10.1177/0260106012437550

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nutr Health        ISSN: 0260-1060


  18 in total

1.  Ocean acidification increases fatty acids levels of larval fish.

Authors:  Carlos Díaz-Gil; Ignacio A Catalán; Miquel Palmer; Cynthia K Faulk; Lee A Fuiman
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 3.703

Review 2.  Characterization of cardiolipins and their oxidation products by LC-MS analysis.

Authors:  Yulia Y Tyurina; Rosario M Domingues; Vladimir A Tyurin; Elisabete Maciel; Pedro Domingues; Andrew A Amoscato; Hülya Bayir; Valerian E Kagan
Journal:  Chem Phys Lipids       Date:  2013-12-12       Impact factor: 3.329

Review 3.  "Only a Life Lived for Others Is Worth Living": Redox Signaling by Oxygenated Phospholipids in Cell Fate Decisions.

Authors:  Yulia Y Tyurina; Indira Shrivastava; Vladimir A Tyurin; Gaowei Mao; Haider H Dar; Simon Watkins; Michael Epperly; Ivet Bahar; Anna A Shvedova; Bruce Pitt; Sally E Wenzel; Rama K Mallampalli; Yoel Sadovsky; Dmitry Gabrilovich; Joel S Greenberger; Hülya Bayır; Valerian E Kagan
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2017-10-16       Impact factor: 8.401

4.  Perspective: Darwinian Applications to Nutrition-The Value of Evolutionary Insights to Teachers and Students.

Authors:  Eirik Garnås
Journal:  Adv Nutr       Date:  2022-10-02       Impact factor: 11.567

Review 5.  Neurodevelopment, nutrition and genetics. A contemporary retrospective on neurocognitive health on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad, India.

Authors:  Michael A Crawford; Yiqun Wang; David E Marsh; Mark R Johnson; Enitan Ogundipe; Ahamed Ibrahim; Hemalatha Rajkumar; S Kowsalya; Kumar S D Kothapalli; J T Brenna
Journal:  Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids       Date:  2022-04-06       Impact factor: 3.015

6.  Associations of plasma total phospholipid fatty acid patterns with feeding practices, growth, and psychomotor development in 6-month-old South African infants.

Authors:  Linda P Siziba; Jeannine Baumgartner; Cristian Ricci; Adriaan Jacobs; Marinel Rothman; Tonderayi M Matsungo; Namukolo Covic; Mieke Faber; Cornelius M Smuts
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2019-01-13       Impact factor: 3.092

Review 7.  Unified theory of Alzheimer's disease (UTAD): implications for prevention and curative therapy.

Authors:  Michael Nehls
Journal:  J Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2016-07-15

8.  Obesity resistance and deregulation of lipogenesis in Δ6-fatty acid desaturase (FADS2) deficiency.

Authors:  Wilhelm Stoffel; Ina Hammels; Britta Jenke; Erika Binczek; Inga Schmidt-Soltau; Susanne Brodesser; Margarete Odenthal; Mario Thevis
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2013-12-30       Impact factor: 8.807

9.  Food for all: designing sustainable and secure future seafood systems.

Authors:  A K Farmery; K Alexander; K Anderson; J L Blanchard; C G Carter; K Evans; M Fischer; A Fleming; S Frusher; E A Fulton; B Haas; C K MacLeod; L Murray; K L Nash; G T Pecl; Y Rousseau; R Trebilco; I E van Putten; S Mauli; L Dutra; D Greeno; J Kaltavara; R Watson; B Nowak
Journal:  Rev Fish Biol Fish       Date:  2021-05-29       Impact factor: 6.845

10.  Docosahexaenoic acid supplementation during pregnancy: a potential tool to prevent membrane rupture and preterm labor.

Authors:  Emanuela Pietrantoni; Federica Del Chierico; Giuliano Rigon; Pamela Vernocchi; Guglielmo Salvatori; Melania Manco; Fabrizio Signore; Lorenza Putignani
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2014-05-07       Impact factor: 5.923

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