High-fat food biases hypothalamic and mesolimbic expression of consummatory drives.
Christopher M MazzoneJing Liang-GuallpaChia LiNora S WolcottMontana H BooneMorgan SouthernNicholas P KobzarIsabel de Araujo SalgadoDeepa M ReddyFangmiao SunYajun ZhangYu-Long LiGuohong CuiMichael J KrashesPublished in: Nature neuroscience (2020)
Maintaining healthy body weight is increasingly difficult in our obesogenic environment. Dieting efforts are often overpowered by the internal drive to consume energy-dense foods. Although the selection of calorically rich substrates over healthier options is identifiable across species, the mechanisms behind this choice remain poorly understood. Using a passive devaluation paradigm, we found that exposure to high-fat diet (HFD) suppresses the intake of nutritionally balanced standard chow diet (SD) irrespective of age, sex, body mass accrual and functional leptin or melanocortin-4 receptor signaling. Longitudinal recordings revealed that this SD devaluation and subsequent shift toward HFD consumption is encoded at the level of hypothalamic agouti-related peptide neurons and mesolimbic dopamine signaling. Prior HFD consumption vastly diminished the capacity of SD to alleviate the negative valence associated with hunger and the rewarding properties of food discovery even after periods of HFD abstinence. These data reveal a neural basis behind the hardships of dieting.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet
- body weight
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- poor prognosis
- single cell
- human health
- small molecule
- physical activity
- signaling pathway
- spinal cord
- high throughput
- smoking cessation
- electronic health record
- weight loss
- cross sectional
- metabolic syndrome
- binding protein
- type diabetes
- spinal cord injury
- climate change
- gene expression
- machine learning
- weight gain
- risk assessment
- prefrontal cortex
- skeletal muscle
- genetic diversity