Br J Nutr. 2015 Nov;114(10):1542-9. doi: 10.1017/S0007114515003451. Epub 2015 Sep 22.
Abstract
Previously,
it has been shown that strawberry (SB) or blueberry (BB)
supplementations, when fed to rats from 19 to 21 months of age, reverse
age-related decrements in motor and cognitive performance. We have postulated that these effects may be the result of a number of positive benefits of the berry polyphenols, including decreased stress
signalling, increased neurogenesis, and increased signals involved in
learning and memory. Thus, the present study was carried out to examine
these mechanisms in aged animals by administering a control, 2 % SB- or 2
% BB-supplemented diet to aged Fischer 344 rats for 8 weeks to
ascertain their effectiveness in reversing age-related deficits in
behavioural and neuronal function. The results showed that rats consuming the berry diets exhibited enhanced motor performance and improved cognition,
specifically working memory. In addition, the rats supplemented with BB
and SB diets showed increased hippocampal neurogenesis and expression
of insulin-like growth factor 1, although the improvements in working
memory performance could not solely be explained by these increases. The
diverse polyphenolics in these berry fruits may have additional
mechanisms of action that could account for their relative differences
in efficacy.