"Eat your veggies" has been an admonition of parents through
the ages, but newly published brain research from the
University of Georgia provides one of the best reasons why.
Lutein, the
organic pigment that gives fruits and vegetables their
color, is a powerful antioxidant that concentrates highly in
the human brain and retina, particularly in the eye's
macular area. Lutein prevents the oxidation of fat in these
areas to maintain the health of the brain and eyes while its
absence leads to macular degeneration, the leading cause of
blindness in the U.S.
This
symbiotic relationship is documented in a new study from the
Vision Sciences Laboratory in the Franklin College of Arts
and Sciences' Department of Psychology published in the
journal Nutrients in March.
"For years
people have forgotten that our brain, along with the rest of
our bodies, is composed of our diet," said Billy Hammond, a
UGA professor in the brain and behavioral sciences program
and the study's co-author. "Diet and exercise have a very
big influence on how the brain ages and many other basic
processes that encourage degeneration, and how our brain
protects itself from that is by concentrating antioxidants
like lutein in these particular areas."
Hammond, who
has published extensively on the nutritional issues of
vision development and function, says the relationships
between body fat, the brain and antioxidants remain very
poorly understood, including highly publicized benefits of
fatty acids like omega-3.
"Humans are
the great symbiotes of nature, and our biology is based on
symbiosis with other microorganisms," he explained. "Basic
processes like oxidative stress and inflammatory stress
occur very largely in the brain, so even these
polyunsaturated fatty acids like omega-3 need to co-localize
with an antioxidant like lutein."
The wider
messages of intuitive connections between diet, function and
aging are both long-held truths and among the most difficult
to reconcile with modern life, he said.
"From
protecting nervous tissue to preventing degenerative
conditions in our brain and other organs, diet and vigorous
exercise have by far the most influence on preventing late
stage diseases as we age as well as making enormous changes
to our biology right now," Hammond said.
The full study is available at
http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/5/3/750. Additional
authors are Emily Bovier, a graduate student in the
psychology department, and Richard Lewis, a professor in the
College of Family and Consumer Sciences.
-Story
by Alan Flurry, University of Georgia