Overweight Mice Show Coordinated Homeostatic and Hedonic Transcriptional Response across Brain.
Ilario De TomaI E GrabowiczMarta Fructuoso-CastellarD TrujillanoBartek WilczyńskiMara DierssenPublished in: eNeuro (2018)
Obesogenic diets lead to overeating and obesity by inducing the expression of genes involved in hedonic and homeostatic responses in specific brain regions. However, how the effects on gene expression are coordinated in the brain so far remains largely unknown. In our study, we provided mice with access to energy-dense diet, which induced overeating and overweight, and we explored the transcriptome changes across the main regions involved in feeding and energy balance: hypothalamus, frontal cortex, and striatum. Interestingly, we detected two regulatory processes: a switch-like regulation with differentially expressed (DE) genes changing over 1.5-fold and "fine-tuned" subtler changes of genes whose levels correlated with body weight and behavioral changes. We found that genes in both categories were positioned within specific topologically associated domains (TADs), which were often differently regulated across different brain regions. These TADs were enriched in genes relevant for the physiological and behavioral observed changes. Our results suggest that chromatin structure coordinates diet-dependent transcriptional regulation.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- gene expression
- genome wide
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- white matter
- transcription factor
- body weight
- physical activity
- high fat diet induced
- dna methylation
- bioinformatics analysis
- weight gain
- cerebral ischemia
- insulin resistance
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- air pollution
- genome wide analysis
- poor prognosis
- dna damage
- working memory
- brain injury
- body mass index
- skeletal muscle
- multiple sclerosis
- long non coding rna
- rna seq