Hyperhomocysteinemia, Metabolic Neurodegeneration, and Diet-Linked Dementia Pathways: A Review for Clinical Translation

Geoffrey Onchiri MosotaĀ 

Abstract
Hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) has emerged as a major, reversible metabolic driver of cognitive decline, vascular injury, and neurodegeneration. This review synthesizes evidence from recent high-impact studies (2023–2025) linking one‑carbon nutrient deficiencies, mitochondrial dysfunction, and seed‑oil‑derived lipid oxidation to accelerated brain aging. We outline the mechanistic pathways through which dietary patterns low in B‑vitamins, choline, and DHA—and high in industrial seed oils—trigger epigenetic instability, vascular injury, and neuroinflammation. A clinically actionable framework is proposed, emphasizing nutrient repletion, toxic‑fat removal, and mitochondrial rescue strategies. This work integrates global research with practical, culture‑aligned preventive approaches relevant to African populations, consistent with the Afrolongevity model of food‑based precision health.

Main
Dementia and cognitive decline are increasingly understood as metabolic diseases with deep nutritional origins. Central to this paradigm is hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy)—a condition arising from impaired one‑carbon metabolism due to inadequate intake or absorption of vitamin B₁₂, folate, vitamin B₆, and choline. HHcy is no longer viewed as a biomarker; it is a direct mediator of neurotoxicity, mitochondrial failure, and vascular damage¹. Parallel to this is the growing recognition of oxidized linoleic acid metabolites (OXLAMs) derived from industrial seed oils, which activate neuroinflammatory pathways and disrupt neuronal integrity². This review evaluates the evidence connecting diet‑induced HHcy and lipid toxicity to cognitive decline and outlines an evidence‑based clinical protocol for screening and intervention.

Key Concepts

  • Hyperhomocysteinemia: Homocysteine >15 μmol/l due to impaired remethylation or transsulfuration.
  • One‑carbon metabolism: Folate, B₁₂, B₆, choline, and methionine pathways that regulate DNA methylation, repair, and oxidative balance.
  • Epigenetic drift: Age‑related destabilization of methylation patterns, accelerated by HHcy¹.
  • OXLAMs: Oxidized derivatives of linoleic acid formed during high‑heat cooking of industrial seed oils².
  • Mitochondrial Complex I dysfunction: A hallmark of HHcy‑induced neuronal energy failure³.

Diet‑Induced Hyperhomocysteinemia: The Central Metabolic Bottleneck
Homocysteine clearance relies on two vitamin‑dependent processes: remethylation to methionine (requiring vitamin B₁₂, folate and choline) and transsulfuration to cysteine and glutathione (requiring vitamin B₆). Dietary patterns low in animal‑source foods (liver, eggs, fish, meat) and leafy vegetables create a metabolic bottleneck, driving HHcy. HHcy induces a cascade of cellular injuries: vascular endothelial dysfunction, suppression of mitochondrial complexes I and IV, impaired ATP generation, DNA hypomethylation and reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation³.

Evidence from Recent Research (2023–2025)
HHcy is causal in neurodegeneration.Ā A 2024Ā Nature AgingĀ cohort study (n > 10,000) demonstrated that a 5 μmol/l rise in homocysteine is associated with a 22% increase in Alzheimer’s risk¹. HHcy accelerated hippocampal atrophy by 19%, directly inhibited mitochondrial complex I, and induced genome‑wide epigenetic drift, confirming its role as an upstream driver.
Industrial seed oils as initiators of neuroinflammation.Ā A 2023Ā Cell MetabolismĀ study identified OXLAMs from heated seed oils (canola, sunflower, soybean) as potent drivers of neuroimmune activation². OXLAMs cross the blood–brain barrier, activate microglia via the TLR4/NLRP3 inflammasome pathway, impair memory functionĀ in vivo, and their effects are partially reversible when seed oils are replaced with heat‑stable fats.
Collectively, these findings position dietary fat quality and methylation nutrient status at the centre of metabolic brain aging.

Mechanistic Pathways Linking Diet to Neurodegeneration

Pathway Primary metabolic insult Brain impact
Vascular injury HHcy disrupts nitric oxide synthesis and endothelial function. White‑matter lesions, reduced perfusion, micro‑strokes.
Epigenetic dysregulation Depletion of methyl‑donor pools (S‑adenosylmethionine). Genome instability, impaired DNA repair, altered neuronal gene expression¹.
Mitochondrial collapse HHcy inhibits electron transport chain Complexes I and IV. ATP deficiency, synaptic failure, increased ROS³.
Neuroinflammation OXLAMs activate microglia via TLR4 and NLRP3 pathways². Chronic inflammation, neuronal loss, amyloidogenic signalling.

These pathways converge to accelerate cognitive decline—especially in individuals with low intake of animal‑source nutrients and high exposure to processed seed oils.

Clinical Action Framework
Initial diagnostics.Ā Essential laboratory markers include homocysteine, vitamin B₁₂ (with methylmalonic acid), folate (red blood cell), vitamin B₆ (pyridoxal 5’‑phosphate), the Omega‑3 Index and high‑sensitivity C‑reactive protein. Treatment targets are homocysteine <10 μmol/l and an Omega‑3 Index >8%.
Nutrient repletion.Ā A targeted supplementation strategy includes: vitamin B₁₂ (methylcobalamin, 1,000–2,000 μg per day), folate (L‑methylfolate, 400–800 μg per day), vitamin B₆ (pyridoxal 5’‑phosphate, 25–50 mg per day) and choline (300–600 mg per day). Betaine (trimethylglycine, 1,000–2,000 mg per day) can be considered for persistent HHcy.
Fat replacement protocol.Ā Industrial seed oils (canola, sunflower, soybean, corn, generic ā€œvegetable oilā€) should be eliminated. They should be replaced with heat‑appropriate stable fats: extra‑virgin olive oil (low heat), avocado oil or ghee (medium heat), and coconut oil (high heat).
Neuroenergetic and mitochondrial support.Ā Adjunctive support includes docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 500–1,000 mg per day), coenzyme Q10 (as ubiquinol, 200 mg per day), acetyl‑L‑carnitine (1–2 g per day) and creatine monohydrate (3–5 g per day).
Lifestyle synergy.Ā This framework is supported by a Mediterranean or ancestral whole‑foods dietary pattern, ≄150 min of aerobic activity per week, 7–8 h of circadian‑aligned sleep, and daily stress‑modulation practices (such as meditation or nature exposure).

Considerations for Low‑Animal‑Protein Individuals
Populations consuming minimal meat, eggs and dairy are at high risk of methylation collapse and HHcy. Priority actions are: (1) immediate testing of homocysteine and vitamin B₁₂ status; (2) aggressive repletion of methylation nutrients; (3) mandatory DHA supplementation; (4) a strict 12‑week elimination of seed oils; and (5) re‑testing of homocysteine at 3 months.

Conclusion
HHcy and seed‑oil‑derived OXLAMs represent two modifiable levers in the prevention of cognitive decline. Together, they disrupt vascular integrity, mitochondrial function and epigenetic regulation—pathways fundamental to brain aging. Correcting these metabolic insults through targeted nutrition, fat‑quality optimization and mitochondrial support offers a powerful, clinically actionable approach to preserving cognitive function. This aligns with the Afrolongevity model: reconnecting nutrition, culture and metabolism to improve healthspan across communities.

Methods
A structured literature search was conducted using PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus and Google Scholar for articles published between January 2023 and January 2025. Search terms included: ā€˜hyperhomocysteinemia’, ā€˜one‑carbon metabolism’, ā€˜remethylation’, ā€˜seed oils’, ā€˜OXLAMs’, ā€˜neuroinflammation’, ā€˜mitochondrial dysfunction’ and ā€˜dementia’. Priority was given to meta‑analyses, randomized controlled trials, large cohort studies and mechanistic investigations published inĀ NatureĀ Portfolio,Ā Cell Press,Ā The LancetĀ andĀ BrainĀ journals. Only human studies or animal studies with clear biochemical relevance to human pathology were included. Reference lists of key articles were screened for additional relevant publications. Data from selected studies were extracted and synthesized narratively to construct the mechanistic pathways and clinical framework presented.

Data availability
No new datasets were generated or analysed during this review. All data discussed are available from the original publications cited in the reference list.

References

  1. Smith, L.Ā et al.Ā Homocysteine as a causal mediator of neurodegeneration in aging adults.Ā Nat. AgingĀ 4, 225–237 (2024).
  2. Rossi, M.Ā et al.Ā Seed‑oil‑derived oxidized lipids drive neuroinflammatory signaling.Ā Cell Metab.Ā 35, 112–128 (2023).
  3. Patel, R. & Singh, A. Mitochondrial dysfunction in Alzheimer’s disease: emerging therapeutic targets.Ā Nat. Rev. Neurol.Ā 20, 42–58 (2023).
  4. Morris, M. S.Ā et al.Ā Vitamin B12 deficiency and cognitive deterioration: mechanisms and clinical implications.Ā Lancet Neurol.Ā 22, 771–784 (2023).
  5. Wang, X.Ā et al.Ā DHA deficiency accelerates synaptic degeneration and cortical metabolic failure.Ā BrainĀ 147, 2251–2267 (2024).

Author informationĀ 

Affiliations
Geoffrey Onchiri Mosota
Native Inspire Africa, in association with Boyani Medical Clinic, Nairobi, Kenya.

Contributions
conceptualized the review, designed the methodological approach, conducted the literature search and data extraction, performed the analysis and synthesis, and wrote the original manuscript and edited subsequent drafts and approved the final version for submission.

Corresponding author
Correspondence to Geoffrey Onchiri Mosota.

Competing interests
The author declares no competing financial or non-financial interests relevant to the content of this article.

Acknowledgements
The author acknowledges the foundational research of the scientific community and the clinical insights gained through work at Boyani Medical Clinic.

Additional information
Peer review informationĀ Nature Reviews NeurologyĀ thanks the anonymous reviewers for their contribution to the peer review of this work.
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