Children’s Nutrition Research Center Staff Publications

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Journal

EBioMedicine

DOI

10.1016/j.ebiom.2021.103791

PMID

35030356

PMCID

PMC8761690

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

1-11-2022

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Carbon, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Infant, Kwashiorkor, Malnutrition, Protein-Energy Malnutrition, Severe acute malnutrition, Methionine, Choline, Methyl donors, Nutritional edema, Edematous malnutrition

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Kwashiorkor is a childhood syndrome of edematous malnutrition. Its precise nutritional precipitants remain uncertain despite nine decades of study. Remarkably, kwashiorkor's disturbances resemble the effects of experimental diets that are deficient in one-carbon nutrients. This similarity suggests that kwashiorkor may represent a nutritionally mediated syndrome of acute one-carbon metabolism dysfunction. Here we report findings from a cross-sectional exploration of serum one-carbon metabolites in Malawian children.

METHODS: Blood was collected from children aged 12-60 months before nutritional rehabilitation: kwashiorkor (N = 94), marasmic-kwashiorkor (N = 43) marasmus (N = 118), moderate acute malnutrition (N = 56) and controls (N = 46). Serum concentrations of 16 one-carbon metabolites were quantified using LC/MS techniques, and then compared across participant groups.

FINDINGS: Twelve of 16 measured one-carbon metabolites differed significantly between participant groups. Measured outputs of one-carbon metabolism, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) and cysteine, were lower in marasmic-kwashiorkor (median µmol/L (± SD): 0·549 (± 0·217) P = 0·00045 & 90 (± 40) P < 0·0001, respectively) and kwashiorkor (0·557 (± 0·195) P < 0·0001 & 115 (± 50) P < 0·0001), relative to marasmus (0·698 (± 0·212) & 153 (± 42)). ADMA and cysteine were well correlated with methionine in both kwashiorkor and marasmic-kwashiorkor.

INTERPRETATION: Kwashiorkor and marasmic-kwashiorkor were distinguished by evidence of one-carbon metabolism dysfunction. Correlative observations suggest that methionine deficiency drives this dysfunction, which is implicated in the syndrome's pathogenesis. The hypothesis that kwashiorkor can be prevented by fortifying low quality diets with methionine, along with nutrients that support efficient methionine use, such as choline, requires further investigation.

FUNDING: The Hickey Family Foundation, the American College of Gastroenterology, the NICHD, and the USDA/ARS.

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