Vitamin D Deficiency Does Not Affect Cognition and Neurogenesis in Adult C57Bl/6 Mice.
Mark DoumitCarla El-MallahAlaa El-MakkawiOmar A ObeidFiras H KobeissyHala DarwishWassim Abou KheirPublished in: Nutrients (2024)
Vitamin D deficiency is a global problem. Vitamin D, the vitamin D receptor, and its enzymes are found throughout neuronal, ependymal, and glial cells in the brain and are implicated in certain processes and mechanisms in the brain. To investigate the processes affected by vitamin D deficiency in adults, we studied vitamin D deficient, control, and supplemented diets over 6 weeks in male and female C57Bl/6 mice. The effect of the vitamin D diets on proliferation in the neurogenic niches, changes in glial cells, as well as on memory, locomotion, and anxiety-like behavior, was investigated. Six weeks on a deficient diet was adequate time to reach deficiency. However, vitamin D deficiency and supplementation did not affect proliferation, neurogenesis, or astrocyte changes, and this was reflected on behavioral measures. Supplementation only affected microglia in the dentate gyrus of female mice. Indicating that vitamin D deficiency and supplementation do not affect these processes over a 6-week period.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cerebral ischemia
- high fat diet induced
- signaling pathway
- white matter
- weight loss
- cell cycle arrest
- wild type
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord injury
- resting state
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- gestational age
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- blood brain barrier
- cell proliferation
- young adults
- high resolution
- adipose tissue
- depressive symptoms
- brain injury
- preterm birth
- study protocol