High-fat diet alters stress behavior, inflammatory parameters and gut microbiota in Tg APP mice in a sex-specific manner

被引:27
作者
Yanguas-Casas, Natalia [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Torres, Cristina [4 ,5 ,6 ]
Crespo-Castrillo, Andrea [1 ]
Diaz-Pacheco, Sonia [1 ]
Healy, Kiera [4 ,7 ]
Stanton, Catherine [4 ,7 ]
Chowen, Julie A. [8 ,9 ,10 ]
Garcia-Segura, Luis M. [1 ,2 ]
Angeles Arevalo, Maria [1 ,2 ]
Cryan, John F. [4 ,5 ]
de Ceballos, Maria L. [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIC, Cajal Inst, Av Doctor Arce 37, Madrid 28002, Spain
[2] Inst Salud Carlos III, Ctr Biomed Network Res Frailty & Hlth Ageing CIBE, Madrid, Spain
[3] Inst Invest Sanitaria Puerta Hierro Segovia Arana, Lymphoma Res Grp, Med Oncol Dept, Madrid, Spain
[4] Univ Coll Cork, Dept Anat & Neurosci, Cork, Ireland
[5] Univ Coll Cork, APC Microbiome Ireland, Cork, Ireland
[6] Univ Rovira & Virgili, Biochem & Biotechnol Dept, Tarragona 43007, Spain
[7] Teagasc Food Res Ctr, Cork, Ireland
[8] Hosp Infanta Univ Nino Jesus, Dept Endocrinol, Inst Invest Princesa, Madrid 28009, Spain
[9] Inst Salud Carlos III, Ctr Biomed Network Res Physiopathol Obes & Nutr C, Madrid, Spain
[10] Madrid Inst Adv Study Food IMDEA Alimentac, Madrid, Spain
关键词
Anxiety; Alzheimer's disease; Cytokines; Diet; Inflammation; Microbiota; Microglia; Sex differences; Phagocytosis; TgAPP mice; TRANSGENIC MOUSE MODEL; ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE; AKKERMANSIA-MUCINIPHILA; COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; AMYLOID PATHOLOGY; MEMORY DEFICITS; DRIVING-FORCE; OBESITY; BRAIN; RISK;
D O I
10.1016/j.nbd.2021.105495
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Long-term high-fat diet (HFD) consumption commonly leads to obesity, a major health concern of western societies and a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Both conditions present glial activation and inflammation and show sex differences in their incidence, clinical manifestation, and disease course. HFD intake has an important impact on gut microbiota, the bacteria present in the gut, and microbiota dysbiosis is associated with inflammation and certain mental disorders such as anxiety. In this study, we have analyzed the effects of a prolonged (18 weeks, starting at 7 months of age) HFD on male and female mice, both wild type (WT) and TgAPP mice, a model for AD, investigating the behavioral profile, gut microbiota composition and inflammatory/phagocytosis-related gene expression in hippocampus. In the open-field test, no overt differences in motor activity were observed between male and female or WT and TgAPP mice on a low-fat diet (LFD). However, HFD induced anxiety, as judged by decreased motor activity and increased time in the margins in the open-field, and a trend towards increased immobility time in the tail suspension test, with increased defecation. Intriguingly, female TgAPP mice on HFD showed less immobility and defecation compared to female WT mice on HFD. HFD induced dysbiosis of gut microbiota, resulting in reduced microbiota diversity and abundance compared with LFD fed mice, with some significant differences due to sex and little effect of genotype. Gene expression of proinflammatory/phagocytic markers in the hippocampus were not different between male and female WT mice, and in TgAPP mice of both sexes, some cytokines (IL-6 and IFN gamma) were higher than in WT mice on LFD, more so in female TgAPP (IL-6). HFD induced few alterations in mRNA expression of inflammatory/phagocytosis-related genes in male mice, whether WT (IL-1 beta, MHCII), or TgAPP (IL-6). However, in female TgAPP, altered gene expression returned towards control levels following prolonged HFD (IL-6, IL-12 beta, TNF alpha, CD36, IRAK4, PYRY6). In summary, we demonstrate that HFD induces anxiogenic symptoms, marked alterations in gut microbiota, and increased expression of inflammatory genes, except for female TgAPP that appear to be resistant to the diet effects. Lifestyle interventions should be introduced to prevent AD onset or exacerbation by reducing inflammation and its associated symptoms; however, our results suggest that the eventual goal of developing prevention and treatment strategies should take sex into consideration.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 109 条
[51]   Sex Differences in High-fat Diet-induced Obesity, Metabolic Alterations and Learning, and Synaptic Plasticity Deficits in Mice [J].
Hwang, Ling-Ling ;
Wang, Chien-Hua ;
Li, Tzu-Ling ;
Chang, Shih-Dar ;
Lin, Li-Chun ;
Chen, Ching-Ping ;
Chen, Chiung-Tong ;
Liang, Keng-Chen ;
Ho, Ing-Kang ;
Yang, Wei-Shiung ;
Chiou, Lih-Chu .
OBESITY, 2010, 18 (03) :463-469
[52]   Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs and the risk of Alzheimer's disease [J].
in 't Veld, BA ;
Ruitenberg, A ;
Hofman, A ;
Launer, LJ ;
van Duijn, CM ;
Stijnen, T ;
Breteler, MMB ;
Stricker, BHC .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2001, 345 (21) :1515-1521
[53]   The role of sex and body weight on the metabolic effects of high-fat diet in C57BL/6N mice [J].
Ingvorsen, C. ;
Karp, N. A. ;
Lelliott, C. J. .
NUTRITION & DIABETES, 2017, 7 :e261-e261
[54]   You've got male: Sex and the microbiota-gut-brain axis across the lifespan [J].
Jaggar, Minal ;
Rea, Kieran ;
Spichak, Simon ;
Dinan, Timothy G. ;
Cryan, John F. .
FRONTIERS IN NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 2020, 56
[55]   Diet-induced obesity and low testosterone increase neuroinflammation and impair neural function [J].
Jayaraman, Anusha ;
Lent-Schochet, Daniella ;
Pike, Christian J. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION, 2014, 11
[56]   High-fat diet aggravates amyloid-beta and tau pathologies in the 3xTg-AD mouse model [J].
Julien, Carl ;
Tremblay, Cyntia ;
Phivilay, Alix ;
Berthiaume, Line ;
Emond, Vincent ;
Julien, Pierre ;
Calon, Frederic .
NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING, 2010, 31 (09) :1516-1531
[57]   The Microbiota of the Gut in Preschool Children With Normal and Excessive Body Weight [J].
Karlsson, Caroline L. J. ;
Onnerfalt, Jenny ;
Xu, Jie ;
Molin, Goran ;
Ahrne, Siv ;
Thorngren-Jerneck, Kristina .
OBESITY, 2012, 20 (11) :2257-2261
[58]   Effects of Probiotic Supplementation on Short Chain Fatty Acids in the AppNL-G-F Mouse Model of Alzheimer's Disease [J].
Kaur, Harpreet ;
Golovko, Svetlana ;
Golovko, Mikhail Y. ;
Singh, Surjeet ;
Darland, Diane C. ;
Combs, Colin K. .
JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2020, 76 (03) :1083-1102
[59]   Withania somnifera as a potential candidate to ameliorate high fat diet-induced anxiety and neuroinflammation [J].
Kaur, Taranjeet ;
Kaur, Gurcharan .
JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION, 2017, 14
[60]   Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease induces signs of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in wild-type mice and accelerates pathological signs of AD in an AD model [J].
Kim, Do-Geun ;
Krenz, Antje ;
Toussaint, Leon E. ;
Maurer, Kirk J. ;
Robinson, Sudie-Ann ;
Yan, Angela ;
Torres, Luisa ;
Bynoe, Margaret S. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION, 2016, 13