Nutritional strategies cause memory damage and alter biochemical parameters without causing neuroinflammation.
Keila Rufatto de SouzaNicole Alessandra EngelHevylin Jacinto SoaresCatarina Barbosa Chaves BressanLarissa Marques Dela VedovaLarissa Espindola da SilvaTalita Farias MendesMariella Reinol da SilvaMariana Pacheco de OliveiraAmanda Indalecio GoulartEmily da Silva CórneoHeloísa de Medeiros BorgesMonique MichelsJoão Vitor Silvano BittencourtLaura de Roch CasagrandeGabriela Kozuchovski FerreiraFabricia Cardoso PetronilhoFelipe Dal PizzolPaulo Cesar Lock SilveiraRafael Mariano de BitencourtMarina Goulart da SilvaGislaine Tezza RezinPublished in: Metabolic brain disease (2024)
Obesity results from an energy imbalance and has been considered an epidemic due to its increasing rates worldwide. It is classified as a low-grade chronic inflammatory disease and has associated comorbidities. Different nutritional strategies are used for the purpose of weight loss, highlighting low-carbohydrate (LC) diets, ketogenic diets, and intermittent fasting (IF). These strategies can lead to metabolic and behavioral changes as they stimulate different biochemical pathways. Therefore, this study evaluated memory, energy metabolism, neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, and antioxidant defense parameters in mice subjected to an LC diet, ketogenic diet (KD), or IF. Eighty male Swiss mice, 60 days old, were divided into 4 groups: control, LC, KD, or IF. Body weight was measured weekly, and food intake every 48 h. After 15 days of nutritional interventions, the animals were subjected to the behavioral object recognition test and subsequently euthanized. Then, visceral fat was removed and weighed, and the brain was isolated for inflammatory and biochemical analysis. We concluded from this study that the LC and KD strategies could damage memory, IF improves the production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and the LC, KD, and IF strategies do not lead to neuroinflammatory damage but present damage at the level of oxidative stress.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- weight loss
- low grade
- bariatric surgery
- working memory
- simultaneous determination
- insulin resistance
- body weight
- roux en y gastric bypass
- diabetic rats
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- high fat diet induced
- dna damage
- physical activity
- induced apoptosis
- gastric bypass
- high grade
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- liquid chromatography
- cerebral ischemia
- blood pressure
- type diabetes
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- weight gain
- signaling pathway
- white matter
- cognitive impairment
- solid phase extraction
- body mass index
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- data analysis
- blood brain barrier
- innate immune
- high resolution mass spectrometry