Author:
Miranda-Dominguez Oscar,Ramirez Julian S. B.,Mitchell A. J.,Perrone Anders,Earl Eric,Carpenter Sam,Feczko Eric,Graham Alice,Jeon Sookyoung,Cohen Neal J.,Renner Laurie,Neuringer Martha,Kuchan Matthew J.,Erdman John W.,Fair Damien
Abstract
AbstractNutrition during the first years of life has a significant impact on brain development. This study characterized differences in brain maturation from birth to 6 months of life in infant macaques fed formulas differing in content of lutein, β-carotene, and other carotenoids using Magnetic Resonance Imaging to measure functional connectivity. We observed differences in functional connectivity based on the interaction of diet, age and brain networks. Post hoc analysis revealed significant diet-specific differences between insular-opercular and somatomotor networks at 2 months of age, dorsal attention and somatomotor at 4 months of age, and within somatomotor and between somatomotor-visual and auditory-dorsal attention networks at 6 months of age. Overall, we found a larger divergence in connectivity from the breastfeeding group in infant macaques fed formula containing no supplemental carotenoids in comparison to those fed formula supplemented with carotenoids. These findings suggest that carotenoid formula supplementation influences functional brain development.
Funder
Tartar Trust Fellowship
OHSU Parkinson Center of Oregon Pilot Grant
National Institutes of Health
Abbott Laboratories through the Center for Nutrition, Learning, and Memory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
5 articles.
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