Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences

Obesity significantly increases the risk for anxiety and depression. Our group has recently demonstrated a role for nucleus accumbens (NAc) pro-inflammatory nuclear factor kappa-B (NFkB) signaling in the development of anxiodepressive-like behaviors by diet-induced obesity in male mice. The NAc is a...

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Main Authors: Léa Décarie-Spain, Cécile Hryhorczuk, David Lau, Élizabeth Jacob-Brassard, Alexandre Fisette, Stephanie Fulton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-10-01
Series:Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666354621001277
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spelling doaj-f8a128055b774a3184fb938eb7f3a9b82021-09-01T04:22:46ZengElsevierBrain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health2666-35462021-10-0116100324Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequencesLéa Décarie-Spain0Cécile Hryhorczuk1David Lau2Élizabeth Jacob-Brassard3Alexandre Fisette4Stephanie Fulton5Centre de recherche du CHUM & Montreal Diabetes Research Centre, Canada; Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, Canada; Corresponding author. 835 Bloom Walk, Los Angeles, CA, 90089, USA.Centre de recherche du CHUM & Montreal Diabetes Research Centre, CanadaCentre de recherche du CHUM & Montreal Diabetes Research Centre, Canada; Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, CanadaCentre de recherche du CHUM & Montreal Diabetes Research Centre, CanadaCentre de recherche du CHUM & Montreal Diabetes Research Centre, Canada; Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, CanadaCentre de recherche du CHUM & Montreal Diabetes Research Centre, Canada; Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, CanadaObesity significantly increases the risk for anxiety and depression. Our group has recently demonstrated a role for nucleus accumbens (NAc) pro-inflammatory nuclear factor kappa-B (NFkB) signaling in the development of anxiodepressive-like behaviors by diet-induced obesity in male mice. The NAc is a brain region involved in goal-oriented behavior and mood regulation whose functions are critical to hedonic feeding and motivation. While the incidence of depression and anxiety disorders is significantly higher in women than in men, the use of female animal models in psychiatric research remains limited. We set out to investigate the impact of chronic intake of saturated and monounsaturated high-fat diets (HFD) on energy metabolism and on anxiety- and despair-like behaviors in female mice and to ascertain the contribution of NAc NFkB-mediated inflammation herein.Adult C57Bl6N female mice were fed either a saturated HFD, an isocaloric monounsaturated HFD or a control low-fat diet for 24 weeks, after which metabolic profiling and behavioral testing for anxiodepressive-like behaviors were conducted. Plasma was collected at time of sacrifice for quantification of leptin, inflammatory markers as well as 17 β-estradiol levels and brains were harvested to analyze NAc expression of pro-inflammatory genes and estrogen-signaling molecules. In another group of female mice placed on the saturated HFD or the control diet for 24 weeks, we performed adenoviral-mediated invalidation of the NFkB signaling pathway in the NAc prior to behavioral testing.While both HFDs provoked obesity and metabolic impairments, only the saturated HFD triggered anxiodepressive-like behaviors and caused marked elevations in plasma estrogen. This saturated HFD-specific behavioral phenotype could not be explained by NAc inflammation alone and was unaffected by NAc invalidation of the NFkB signaling pathway. Instead, we found changes in the expression of estrogen signaling markers. Such results diverge from the inflammatory mechanisms underlying diet- and obesity-induced metabolic dysfunction and anxiodepressive-like behavior onset in male mice and call attention to the role of estrogen signaling in diet-related anxiodepressive-like phenotypes in female mice.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666354621001277LipidsDepressionAnxietyObesityInflammationEstrogen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Léa Décarie-Spain
Cécile Hryhorczuk
David Lau
Élizabeth Jacob-Brassard
Alexandre Fisette
Stephanie Fulton
spellingShingle Léa Décarie-Spain
Cécile Hryhorczuk
David Lau
Élizabeth Jacob-Brassard
Alexandre Fisette
Stephanie Fulton
Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
Lipids
Depression
Anxiety
Obesity
Inflammation
Estrogen
author_facet Léa Décarie-Spain
Cécile Hryhorczuk
David Lau
Élizabeth Jacob-Brassard
Alexandre Fisette
Stephanie Fulton
author_sort Léa Décarie-Spain
title Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
title_short Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
title_full Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
title_fullStr Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
title_full_unstemmed Prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
title_sort prolonged saturated, but not monounsaturated, high-fat feeding provokes anxiodepressive-like behaviors in female mice despite similar metabolic consequences
publisher Elsevier
series Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
issn 2666-3546
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Obesity significantly increases the risk for anxiety and depression. Our group has recently demonstrated a role for nucleus accumbens (NAc) pro-inflammatory nuclear factor kappa-B (NFkB) signaling in the development of anxiodepressive-like behaviors by diet-induced obesity in male mice. The NAc is a brain region involved in goal-oriented behavior and mood regulation whose functions are critical to hedonic feeding and motivation. While the incidence of depression and anxiety disorders is significantly higher in women than in men, the use of female animal models in psychiatric research remains limited. We set out to investigate the impact of chronic intake of saturated and monounsaturated high-fat diets (HFD) on energy metabolism and on anxiety- and despair-like behaviors in female mice and to ascertain the contribution of NAc NFkB-mediated inflammation herein.Adult C57Bl6N female mice were fed either a saturated HFD, an isocaloric monounsaturated HFD or a control low-fat diet for 24 weeks, after which metabolic profiling and behavioral testing for anxiodepressive-like behaviors were conducted. Plasma was collected at time of sacrifice for quantification of leptin, inflammatory markers as well as 17 β-estradiol levels and brains were harvested to analyze NAc expression of pro-inflammatory genes and estrogen-signaling molecules. In another group of female mice placed on the saturated HFD or the control diet for 24 weeks, we performed adenoviral-mediated invalidation of the NFkB signaling pathway in the NAc prior to behavioral testing.While both HFDs provoked obesity and metabolic impairments, only the saturated HFD triggered anxiodepressive-like behaviors and caused marked elevations in plasma estrogen. This saturated HFD-specific behavioral phenotype could not be explained by NAc inflammation alone and was unaffected by NAc invalidation of the NFkB signaling pathway. Instead, we found changes in the expression of estrogen signaling markers. Such results diverge from the inflammatory mechanisms underlying diet- and obesity-induced metabolic dysfunction and anxiodepressive-like behavior onset in male mice and call attention to the role of estrogen signaling in diet-related anxiodepressive-like phenotypes in female mice.
topic Lipids
Depression
Anxiety
Obesity
Inflammation
Estrogen
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666354621001277
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