| Literature DB >> 34680179 |
Hendrik Nieraad1, Nina Pannwitz1, Natasja de Bruin1, Gerd Geisslinger1,2, Uwe Till3.
Abstract
Disturbances in the one-carbon metabolism are often indicated by altered levels of the endogenous amino acid homocysteine (HCys), which is additionally discussed to causally contribute to diverse pathologies. In the first part of the present review, we profoundly and critically discuss the metabolic role and pathomechanisms of HCys, as well as its potential impact on different human disorders. The use of adequate animal models can aid in unravelling the complex pathological processes underlying the role of hyperhomocysteinemia (HHCys). Therefore, in the second part, we systematically searched PubMed/Medline for animal studies regarding HHCys and focused on the potential impact on cognitive performance and decline. The majority of reviewed studies reported a significant effect of HHCys on the investigated behavioral outcomes. Despite of persistent controversial discussions about equivocal findings, especially in clinical studies, the present evaluation of preclinical evidence indicates a causal link between HHCys and cognition-related- especially dementia-like disorders, and points out the further urge for large-scale, well-designed clinical studies in order to elucidate the normalization of HCys levels as a potential preventative or therapeutic approach in human pathologies.Entities:
Keywords: animal; dementia; disease models; hyperhomocysteinemia; vitamin B deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34680179 PMCID: PMC8533891 DOI: 10.3390/biom11101546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1All essential reactions of the C1 metabolism: On the left side, the folic acid cycle is depicted, showing formyl and methenyl groups bound to tetrahydrofolate (THF), which is involved in purine synthesis (DNA, RNA), and methylene, involved in deoxythymidylate synthesis (DNA) and methyl groups that are required for the re-methylation of homocysteine (HCys) to methionine. On the right side, the methylation cycle is illustrated, including S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) methylations: nucleic acids, proteins, phospholipids, neurotransmitters, hormones, creatine and others. Histone protein, DNA and RNA methylations cause epigenetic regulation [1,2]. The vast majority of methylations originate from SAM [3]. More than 200 SAM-dependent methyltransferases are encoded in the human genome [4]. Red: products, intermediate reactions are omitted (dashed arrows); blue: reactions with enzymes for which genetic defects frequently occur or which catalyze reactions that can be reduced; green: necessary B-vitamins that cannot replace each other. The reaction catalyzed by methionine synthase needs two vitamins as cofactors at the same time; two light blue arrows: re-methylation of HCys (upwards), transsulfuration of HCys (downwards); MTHFR: 5,10-methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase, THF: tetrahydrofolate, DHF: dihydrofolate, SAM: S-adenosyl methionine, SAH: S-adenosyl homocysteine.
Figure 2Adaption of the previous chart (colors and abbreviations: see Figure 1 caption): C1 metabolism in the case of vitamin deficiency or genetic enzyme variants; reductions in supply or turnover due to various causes are marked by thinner arrows; inhibitory effects are marked by the crossed-out arrow.
Frequent causes of C1 metabolic disorders.
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Cellular deficiency in one or more of the vitamins B6, B12 and folate: |
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Insufficient intake via food: Vitamin B12 deficiency in vegetarians and vegans, who do not supplement vitamin B12 [ All three vitamins in elderly subjects, especially in nursing homes [ Pronounced folic acid deficiency in industrialized countries around the world [ Loss due to inadequate preparation, especially for folic acid [ Increased need during pregnancy, lactation and hemodialysis. Insufficient intestinal absorption: unspecific in celiac disease, inflammatory bowel diseases and resections, specific for B12 with intrinsic factor deficiency or auto-antibodies against parietal cells [ Intracellular, metabolic causes, e.g., accumulation of 5-methyl-THF in the case of pronounced B12 deficiency (“folic acid trap”), leading to a deficiency of THF-dependent C1 compounds, despite adequate folic acid intake [ Side effects of pharmaceuticals on absorption or metabolism of particular vitamins, e.g., anticonvulsant drugs, levodopa, metformin [ |
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Common genetic variants in C1 metabolism: |
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MTHFR: C677T point mutation in homozygous form (TT) in 12–15% of the European population, which can be compensated by adequate folic acid intake [ CBS: About 230 known mutations that are rarely homozygous. In the heterozygous form, they potentially occur in around 1% of the European population [ |
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Lifestyle factors (the underlying mechanisms are often not clear or multifactorial and usually linked to their effect on plasma HCys level): |
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Acquired reductions in the activity of enzymes, e.g., methionine synthase due to acetaldehyde in alcoholics [ Cigarette smoking appears as an independent determinant of HCys levels, with an increase in approx. 1% per cigarette smoked [ Relatively large amounts of coffee consumption are necessary to increase HCys [ |
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Oxidative stress: |
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Particularly nitric oxide inhibits methionine synthase directly, as well as by binding cobalamin [ |
Figure 3Adaption of the previous chart (colors and abbreviations: see Figure 1 caption): pathogenic effects of metabolites or products in the context of disorders in C1 metabolism.
Figure 4Homocysteine pathology; presentation of the most important possible reactions of HCys resulting in pathological effects; color differentiation and capital letters allow assignment to the different mechanisms and their effects: (A) In contrast to cysteine, HCys has a highly reactive sulfhydryl group, e.g., it can form a ring shape in the case of homocysteine thiolactone, which accounts for approximately 1/10 of the free HCys in blood plasma and can bind to lysine or arginine residues of proteins via a peptide bond (N-homocysteinylation) [55]. (B) In the latter case, asymmetrical dimethylarginine is released during the destruction of the protein, which decouples the endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase, so that it produces the superoxide anion instead of NO [56]. NO and the superoxide anion form peroxynitrite, which further contributes to decoupling of the enzyme complex [56]. (C) HCys itself can bind NO and thus inactivate it [57]. (D) HCys forms mixed disulfides with cysteine residues of proteins, called S-homocysteinylation, which can lead to functional impairments [58]. (E) HCys generates hydrogen peroxide via disulfide formation, from which all important ROS and radicals can arise [59]. (F) The spontaneous oxidation of the sulfhydryl group results in homocysteic acid (homocysteine sulfonic acid) with an agonistic effect on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors [60].
Clinical symptoms associated with a homozygous CBS defect in analogy to common HHCys-related diseases (green).
| Vessels: |
| - Arteries: intimal thickening, media destruction, fibrous plaques, thrombosis |
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| - Veins: deep leg vein thrombosis, embolism |
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| If left untreated, most patients die in childhood or adolescence from consequences of vascular damage: arterial and venous thrombosis, embolism, myocardial infarction and stroke |
| Central nervous system: |
| - Mental retardation, epilepsy |
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| Skeleton: |
| - Marfanoid habit with arachnodactyly, bone deformities, osteoporosis |
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| Eyes: |
| - Lens dislocation and severe myopia, also possible cataract, optic atrophy and retinal degeneration |
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Cognitive decline and dementia; left column: relevant HCys-associated pathomechanisms; right column: correlation analyses and information on clinical studies; citation of other reviews or meta-analyses is marked as Rev [citation], followed by the reported findings, without individual quotations.
| Plasma-HCys | Risk | |
| ≥15 μM | 3-fold for cognitive impairment | |
| ≥14 μM | 2-fold for Alzheimer’s dementia | |
| Of approx. 10 placebo-controlled intervention studies with the three B-vitamins (B6, B12, folate), only five meet the decisive criteria: primary preventive approach, increased HCys starting level, study duration of at least two years, adequate vitamin dosage, proven decline in cognitive parameters in the placebo group. Significant results of these studies in favor of the vitamins: reduction of the brain atrophy rate, mainly gray matter, significantly better values for dementia status, MMSE (mini mental state evaluation) and learning test. | ||
Brain tissue: no HCys transsulfuration and no re-methylation of HCys to methionine by betaine (cf. Section 2.1) high sensitivity to folic acid and vitamin B12 deficiency.
Reviewed animal studies derived from the systematic literature search of PubMed/Medline, which served as a basis for further analysis and indicates potential treatment options for elevated HCys levels or related symptoms; abbreviations: WT: wild type, KI: knock-in, KO: knock-out, Tg: transgenic, B-vit. def.: deficiency in B-vitamins (and related substances), Met suppl.: supplementation of L-methionine, CBS: cystathionine β-synthase, MTHFR: methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, CTH: cystathionine γ-lyase.
| Strategy to Induce HHCys | |||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diet/Drinking Water | Injection | Genetic Manipulation | Maternal HHCys Impact | Others | Investigated Biological Matrix | Impact on Cognitive Performance | |||||||||||||||
| Publication | Animal Species | B-vit. def. | Met suppl. | HCys suppl. | Others | HCys | Others | CBS | MTHFR | Others | Blood Levels (µM): ↑HCys vs. Control/Baseline Data (Where Applicable) | Plasma | Serum | Brain Tissue | CSF | Urine | Liver Tissue | Cognitive Domain & Reported Effects of HHCys | Investigation of Potential Treatment Option | ||
| [ | rat | 28.8 vs. 6.3 | ozagrel | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 2.3 vs. 0.9 1 | edaravone | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 348.2 vs. 7.7 2;3;4 | B-vitamins, PUFA, Fortasyn® Connect-like diet | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 5.65 vs. 4.85 (offspring) | offspring: | mild transient neonatal hypoxia | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 19.0 vs. < 5 (WT); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 11.22 vs. 7.08 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 27.3 vs. 7.9 (dams); | offspring: | sodium hydrosulfide | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | synthetic tricyclic sulfonamide PP2A activators | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | maternal choline supplementation | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 10.1 vs. 6.1 | emodin | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 11.38 vs. 7.15 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 71.5 vs. 4.9 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 423 vs. < 16 | anxiety (n.a.); exploration (n.a.); | methionine restriction, enzyme replacement | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 140.50 vs. < 5 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 22 vs. 17 (injection); | B-vitamins, SAM | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 263 vs. 13 (CBS); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 13.13 vs. 8.5 | betaine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 82.93 vs. 5.89 (WT); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | methionine restriction | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 20 vs. 9 1 | liraglutide | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 13.97 vs. 8.55 (genetic); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 24 vs. 8 1 (offspring) | offspring: | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 17.5 vs. 8 | n.a. | B-vitamins | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 22 vs. 8 (Met suppl.); | statins | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | Moringa oleifera extract | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 28 vs. 10 1 | n.a. | epigallocatechin-3-gallate | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 255.15 vs. 7.15 (acute); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 52 vs. 22 1 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 0.59 vs. 0.3 1 | caffeine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 22.01 vs. 14.43 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 22 vs. 10 1 (dams) | offspring: | folate | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | Ginkgo biloba extract | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | hydrogen sulfide | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. 2 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 9 vs. 4.5 1 | Vitis vinifera leaves polyphenols | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 29 vs. 10 (homozygous); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | creatine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 36 vs. 4 1 | hydrogen sulfide | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 22 vs. 7 (diet); | bosentan | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | genetic absence of ALOX5 | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | ALOX5 inhibition (zileuton) | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 153.79 vs. 62.21 3 | fisetin | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 165.48 vs. 49.64 3 | hesperidin | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | hydrogen sulfide | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 67.40 vs. < detection range (WT); | anti-Aβ immunotherapy | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 8.18 vs. 4.43 (diet); | B-vitamins, betaine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 26 vs. 15 (dams); | n.a. | maternal vitamin B6 supplementation | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | hydrogen sulfide | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | cinnamon | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 46.1 vs. 4.6 | Brazilian propolis extract | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. 5 | betaine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 22 vs. 14 (dams) 1 ; | offspring: | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. 5 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | atractylenolide III | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 18 vs. 13 (WT); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 16.7 vs. 16.3 | n.a. | zinc | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 16 vs. 7 1 | fatty acids | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | combination: acetylcholinesterase inhibitor + calcium channel blocker | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | offspring: | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 22 vs. 6 1 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | ablation of MMP9 gene | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 13 vs. 3 (homozygous); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 48 vs. 7 1 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 10 vs. 6 1 | hydroxysafflor yellow A | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. 2 | memantine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 9.2 vs. 3.8 | rivastigmine (liposomal) | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 7.5 vs. 5.5 (age); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 26 vs. 8 (WT); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 82.93 vs. 5.89 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | betaine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 19.16 vs. 5.21 | resveratrol | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 21.2 vs. 6.16 | diethyl dithio carbamate trihydrate, folacin | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 21 vs. 7.4 (dams) | offspring: | ginkgo biloba extract | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 5.1 vs. 3.2 1 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 52.3 vs. 6.96 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 90.68 vs. 2.04 (WT); | SAM | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 21.2 vs. 6.16 | pioglitazone; rosiglitazone | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 100 vs. 8 (Met suppl.); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | acetyl-L-carnitine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. 2 | dextromethorphan | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 111 vs. 5 (WT); | n.a. | SAM | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | pig | 6.88 vs. 5.45 | folate | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | n.a. | N-acetyl cysteine + α-lipoic acid + α-tocopherol | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | curcumin | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | ∼500 µM vs. n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 2.39 vs. 2.37 (offspring) | offspring: | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 26.7 vs. 10.4 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | n.a. 2 | anti-HCA antibody | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 16.8 vs. 3.4 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 155 vs. 5 1 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 30 vs. 6 1 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 35.4 vs. 6.33 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | n.a. | folate | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 16.5 vs. 6.8 (offspring) | offspring: | short-term neonatal hypoxia | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 10.2 vs. 6.2 | B-vitamins | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 32.1 vs. 11.6 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 67 vs. 8.5 (WT); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 257–365 vs. 15.4–25.4 (diff. strains) | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 24.8 vs. 6.8 (dams) | offspring: | melatonin | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 31.3 vs. 4.2 (B-vit. def.); | methionine | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 28.7 vs. 5.2 (B-vit. def.); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 320 vs. 0.2 (WT); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 7.3 vs. 4.0 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 10.2 vs. 6.2 1 | n.a. | B-vitamins | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 26 vs. 6 (dams) | offspring: | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 13.3 vs. 6.8 (offspring) | offspring: | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 101 vs. 37 (WT); | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 243.7 vs. 5.1 (B-vit. def.); | B-vitamins | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 12.6 vs. 7.9 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 4.5 vs. 2.9 1 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 20 vs. 7.5 1 | melatonin | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 205 vs. 3.9 | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 26.2 vs. 6.5 | n.a. | folate | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 400–500 vs. 10 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 25 vs. 2 (WT); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 5.3 vs. 3.25 (heterozygous); | n.a. | n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 125 vs. 9 | n.a. | ||||||||||||||||||
1: Estimated from graph; levels not exactly reported in the study; 2: HCA is also considered in the study; 3: data converted to µM; 4: for reasons of comparability with other studies: reporting of mean; not median as in the original manuscript; 5: transformation of data to µM not applicable.
Additional hand-searched animal studies; abbreviations: WT: wild type, Tg: transgenic, B-vit. def.: deficiency in B-vitamins (and related substances), Met suppl.: supplementation of L-methionine, CBS: cystathionine β-synthase, MTHFR: methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, GAA: guanidinoacetate.
| Strategy to Induce HHCys | |||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diet/Drinking Water | Injection | Genetic Manipulation | Maternal HHCys Impact | Others | Investigated Biological Matrix | ||||||||||||||
| Publication | Animal Species | B-vit. def. | Met suppl. | HCys suppl. | Others | HCys | Others | CBS | MTHFR | Others | Blood Levels (µM): ↑HCys vs. Control/Baseline Data (Where Applicable) | Plasma | Serum | Brain Tissue | CSF | Urine | Liver Tissue | ||
| [ | mouse | 6.5 vs. 5.1 1 (offspring) | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 243.7 vs. 4.6 (B-vit. def.); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 349 vs. n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | pig | 72.33 vs. 10.53 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 34.1 vs. 15.1 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 383.6 vs. n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 19 vs. 10 (genetic); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 45 vs. 15 (Met suppl.); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 9 vs. 1.5 1 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 51.8 vs. 3.0 (Met suppl.); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 140 vs. 20 (diet); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 3.8 vs. 3.7 (genetic); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 23.5 vs. 4.1 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 4.0 vs. 3.38 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 4.5 vs. 3 (genetic); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rabbit | 20.3 vs. 12.3 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 242 vs. 13 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 8.2 vs. 4.0 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 53.6 vs. 9.46 (Met suppl.); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 24.5 vs. 2.6 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 19.5 vs. 6.15 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 500 vs. n.a. | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 8.3 vs. 5.0 (genetic); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 6.3 vs. 4.1 (genetic); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 15.5 vs. 10.5 1 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | rat | 23.6 vs. 11.0 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | monkey | 10.6 vs. 4.0 | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | mouse | 13.5 vs. 6.1 (heterozygous); | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | monkey | 157 vs. 1 | |||||||||||||||||
1: Estimated from graph; levels not exactly reported in the study.
Figure 5The most common causes of HHCys in humans (blue) and induction methods in animal models (red); created with BioRender.com.
Figure 6Average HCys levels and prevalence of different parameters, resulting from the analysis of the reviewed animal studies (numbers in the pie charts and at the bottom of the bars indicate the absolute amount of underlying studies): (A) animal species (154 cases in 154 studies in total); (B) biological matrices (170 cases in 154 studies); (C) HHCys induction methods (193 cases in 154 studies); (D) HCys elevation per induction method (every included study is considered as n = 1); since this is no meta-analysis according to the PRISMA guidelines, it should be considered semi-quantitatively; due to the large variation in individual studies, this panel should be used as a reference only; further methodological details are provided in the appendix of this review; created with GraphPad Prism 8 (San Diego, CA, USA).
Figure 7Impact of HHCys on cognitive performance; data resulting from the analysis of the reviewed animal studies (numbers in the bars indicate the absolute amount of underlying studies); different cognitive domains were analyzed: anxiety and fear memory (39 studies), recognition memory (22), exploration and psychomotor function (35), working memory (21), spatial learning and memory (72); in total, cognitive tests were performed in 102 of the reviewed animal studies; further methodological details are provided in the appendix of this review; created with GraphPad Prism 8 (San Diego, CA, USA).
Atherosclerosis and its consequences: cardiac ischemia, peripheral occlusion, cerebral ischemia.
| Disease course over years or decades without symptoms. Elevated HCys values are pathogenetically involved. Clinical symptoms first become prevalent through complications of atheromatous plaques with a different pathogenesis, in which B-vitamins and HCys hardly play a role. |
Metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes mellitus.
| With a comparable HCys level, oxidative stress is stronger than in controls [ | Plasma HCys level as in controls, but higher if nephropathy is present. HCys is more strongly associated with atherosclerosis and its consequences than in non-diabetes controls [ |
Thrombophilia: venous thrombosis, embolism.
| HCys causes a decrease in the thromboresistance of the endothelial surface by promoting coagulation and inhibiting anticoagulatory and fibrinolytic mechanisms [ |
Depression.
| Case control studies: |
Brain tissue: no HCys transsulfuration and no re-methylation of HCys to methionine by betaine (cf. Section 2.1) high sensitivity to folic acid and vitamin B12 deficiency.
Autism—Rev [75].
| HCys and oxidation products (HCA) activate NMDA receptors → excitotoxicity (cellular Ca2+ increase → activation of proteases and radical formation → cell death = neuron degeneration) | Case-control studies: significant deviations in plasma levels in autistic children: HCys ↑; vitamin B6, B12, folate ↓. |
Brain tissue: no HCys transsulfuration and no re-methylation of HCys to methionine by betaine (cf. Section 2.1) high sensitivity to folic acid and vitamin B12 deficiency.
Pharmacotherapy of neurodegenerative diseases: Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy.
| Substitution with vitamin B6, B12, folate lowers HCys levels [ |
Brain tissue: no HCys transsulfuration and no re-methylation of HCys to methionine by betaine (cf. Section 2.1) high sensitivity to folic acid and vitamin B12 deficiency.
Peripheral neuropathy.
| Most frequent cause: damage to the peripheral myelin protein-22 [ | HCys ↑ causally affects neuropathies in: |
Pregnancy and childbirth.
| Pregnancy changes laboratory parameters for assessing C1 metabolism: | Evaluation of >14,000 pregnancies: |
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Intervention study, three B-vitamins versus placebo (3000 pregnancies, periconceptional onset to end of pregnancy): plasma folic acid ↑, plasma HCys ↓, 63% fewer preeclampsia Risk classification for early abortions: HCys ≥9.9 µM → 2-fold; ≥12.3 µM → 4-fold; ≥15.3 µM → 7-fold [ Intervention study: 25 nullipara, MTHFR C677T-TT carriers, HCys > 12 μM, 3-5 early abortions; 5 mg folic acid and 750 mg vitamin B6 per day for 3 months → 22 women became pregnant without complications [ |
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High HCys levels: → Hypo-methylation of genomic DNA in the brain → Post-translational hypo-methylation of cytoskeletal proteins (see → Homocysteinylation of histone proteins (see Recommended prevention with 0.4 mg folic acid/day → it takes 3 months to reach ≥900 mM erythrocyte folate [ |
Neural tube defects correlate directly with HCys and indirectly with folic acid and vitamin B12 levels in plasma as well as erythrocyte folate; increased risk in case erythrocyte folate <900 mM. MTHFR C677T-TT carriers → increased risk. Interventional studies with periconceptional folic acid substitution (0.4 mg/day) → Interventional study with 0.8 mg folic acid, 4 μg B12, 2.6 mg B6/day versus placebo: >90% reduction and approx. 80% reduction in other defects (heart malformations, pyloric stenoses, ureteral obstruction) [ |
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Vitamin B12 ↓ → birth weight ↓, insulin resistance → visceral obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus → metabolic syndrome, atherosclerosis and consequences | |
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Cause of the sequence listed above: B12 ↓ → HCys ↑ → methylation disorders with epigenetic effects in children (see B12-deficient diet (periconceptional until the end of pregnancy) in rats → offspring after one year: liver methylome with 190 differently methylated genes; liver proteome with 38 differently expressed proteins of lipid, carbohydrate and amino acid metabolism → atherogenic plasma lipid pattern (triglycerides ↑, HDL ↓) [ B12- and folic acid-free diet (periconceptional and during pregnancy and lactation) in rats → offspring after 80 days: pyramidal cell layer thickness (hippocampus) ↓, memory deficits [ High energy versus standard food with the same vitamin intake (3 years) in monkeys: high energy food results in more body fat and a lower birth weight of the offspring, plasma B12 ↓, atherogenic plasma lipid pattern |
Meta-analysis of 20,000 women: plasma HCys in >90 percentile → 50% increased risk for children with reduced birth weight. Increased insulin resistance in 6-year-olds in case mothers had significantly low B12 levels during pregnancy. |
Infertility—Rev [201,204].
| Plasma concentrations of vitamin B6, B12, folate and HCys are similar to those in seminal fluid. | Prospective study—approx. 20,000 women, 8 years: |
Vision loss: exudative macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy—Rev [205,206].
| Human retinal cell culture: HCys induces production of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor). | Direct correlation between plasma HCys level and risk of macular degeneration. |
Increased fracture rate in old age—Rev [75].
| S-homocysteinylation (see | Prospective studies: on average about twice the risk of femoral neck fractures with plasma HCys ≥15 μM. |
Chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia—Rev [207].
| Chronic stress: | Plasma vitamin B12 and HCys levels correlate positively/negatively, with exhaustion, comprehensive psychopathological rating scale, pain and memory ability. |