학술논문

Western High-Fat Diet Consumption during Adolescence Increases Susceptibility to Traumatic Stress while Selectively Disrupting Hippocampal and Ventricular Volumes
Document Type
article
Source
eNeuro. 3(5)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Mental Health
Nutrition
Neurosciences
Neurodegenerative
Pediatric
Behavioral and Social Science
Anxiety Disorders
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Obesity
Brain Disorders
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Animals
Anxiety
Cerebral Ventricles
Diet
Western
Disease Susceptibility
Hippocampus
Leptin
Male
Memory
Organ Size
Random Allocation
Rats
Inbred Lew
Reflex
Startle
Stress Disorders
Post-Traumatic
Stress
Psychological
behavior
high-fat diet
hippocampus
imaging
obesity
PTSD
PTSD
Language
Abstract
Psychological trauma and obesity co-occur frequently and have been identified as major risk factors for psychiatric disorders. Surprisingly, preclinical studies examining how obesity disrupts the ability of the brain to cope with psychological trauma are lacking. The objective of this study was to determine whether an obesogenic Western-like high-fat diet (WD) predisposes rats to post-traumatic stress responsivity. Adolescent Lewis rats (postnatal day 28) were fed ad libitum for 8 weeks with either the experimental WD diet (41.4% kcal from fat) or the control diet (16.5% kcal from fat). We modeled psychological trauma by exposing young adult rats to a cat odor threat. The elevated plus maze and the open field test revealed increased psychological trauma-induced anxiety-like behaviors in the rats that consumed the WD when compared with control animals 1 week after undergoing traumatic stress (p < 0.05). Magnetic resonance imaging showed significant hippocampal atrophy (20% reduction) and lateral ventricular enlargement (50% increase) in the animals fed the WD when compared with controls. These volumetric abnormalities were associated with behavioral indices of anxiety, increased leptin and FK506-binding protein 51 (FKBP51) levels, and reduced hippocampal blood vessel density. We found asymmetric structural vulnerabilities to the WD, particularly the ventral and left hippocampus and lateral ventricle. This study highlights how WD consumption during adolescence impacts key substrates implicated in post-traumatic stress disorder. Understanding how consumption of a WD affects the developmental trajectories of the stress neurocircuitry is critical, as stress susceptibility imposes a marked vulnerability to neuropsychiatric disorders.