Dietary Carotenoids and the Nervous System

This issue of Foods is focused on the general topic of carotenoids within the nervous system. The focus is on the effects of the xanthophylls on the central nervous system (CNS), reflecting the majority of work in this area. [...].

very metabolically active and, hence, highly oxygenated. Carotenoids are known to inhibit lipid peroxidation. The brain is also clearly subject to inflammation, and carotenoids are known to be potent anti-inflammatory agents [8].
In addition to protection, however, the xanthophylls may serve other functions in brain tissue that range from epigenetic regulation to cellular communication [9,10]. On this front, the empirical work has outpaced basic research on mechanisms. We have some fairly convincing evidence that the xanthophylls influence the function of the central nervous system: Results ranging from temporal processing speed to cognition [11][12][13]. At present, however, we have very little understanding of how exactly the pigments achieve these changes.
It is perhaps surprising that it has taken us this long to study how foods, and the components of which they are composed, influence critically important tissues like the brain. Disciplines like psychology and nutrition have rarely interacted in the past. Although "we are what we eat" may be an oft-quoted axiom, it rarely translates into actual study. This appears to be changing. In 2005, Hammond and Wooten [14] found that macular xanthophylls were correlated with temporal processing speed, a measure known to be determined largely at the level of the visual cortex. As the authors noted, L and Z are "…providing some functional improvement unrelated to protection. L, for instance, in model systems…, has been shown to improve gap junction communication, which could improve cell to-cell communication within the nervous system. Thus, increasing L and Z intake could theoretically improve signaling efficiency throughout the visual system." In 2008, Johnson et al. [11] directly tested this idea and conducted a classic clinical trial (randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled) on the efficacy of L, Z, and DHA on cognitive function of elderly women. That study found a statistically significant influence of these compounds on functions like verbal fluency and memory. The next pivotal studies in this area also emerged from the Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University and were presented as conference abstracts in 2011 [15,16]This work confirmed Craft's original finding of the predominance of xanthophylls in human brain and extended the work in a variety of ways: e.g., to infants and centenarians (the former helping to motivate the addition of xanthophylls to infant formula; the latter in collaboration with the Centenarian project at the University of Georgia).
Since 2011, the number of researchers studying the role of xanthophylls in brain function continues to increase (see, for example, [12,13]). As is often the case with highly applied science, the number of sponsors in this area has increased concomitantly (certainly suggesting more research to come). Thus far, research on how nutrition in general and xanthophylls specifically influence the central nervous system has been highly productive; so much so that it serves as an influential model for an emerging discipline which could be loosely described as nutritional neuroscience. This volume contains papers from many of the leaders in this inchoate area and covers topics ranging from eye to brain.

Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflict of interest.