Glucocorticoids Mediate Short-Term High-Fat Diet Induction of Neuroinflammatory Priming, the NLRP3 Inflammasome, and the Danger Signal HMGB1.
Julia L SobeskyHeather M D'AngeloMichael D WeberNathan D AndersonMatthew G FrankLinda R WatkinsSteven F MaierRuth M BarrientosPublished in: eNeuro (2016)
The impact of the foods we eat on metabolism and cardiac physiology has been studied for decades, yet less is known about the effects of foods on the CNS, or the behavioral manifestations that may result from these effects. Previous studies have shown that long-term consumption of high-fat foods leading to diet-induced obesity sensitizes the inflammatory response of the brain to subsequent challenging stimuli, causing deficits in the formation of long-term memories. The new findings reported here demonstrate that short-term consumption of a high-fat diet (HFD) produces the same outcomes, thus allowing the examination of mechanisms involved in this process long before obesity and associated comorbidities occur. Rats fed an HFD for 3 d exhibited increases in corticosterone, the inflammasome-associated protein NLRP3 (nod-like receptor protein 3), and the endogenous danger signal HMGB1 (high-mobility group box 1) in the hippocampus. A low-dose (10 μg/kg) lipopolysaccharide (LPS) immune challenge potentiated the neuroinflammatory response in the hippocampus of rats fed the HFD, and caused a deficit in the formation of long-term memory, effects not observed in rats fed regular chow. The blockade of corticosterone action with the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist mifepristone prevented the NLRP3 and HMGB1 increases in unchallenged animals, normalized the proinflammatory response to LPS, and prevented the memory impairment. These data suggest that short-term HFD consumption increases vulnerability to memory disruptions caused by an immune challenge by upregulating important neuroinflammatory priming and danger signals in the hippocampus, and that these effects are mediated by increases in hippocampal corticosterone.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet
- insulin resistance
- inflammatory response
- adipose tissue
- nlrp inflammasome
- low dose
- metabolic syndrome
- cerebral ischemia
- type diabetes
- high fat diet induced
- working memory
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- skeletal muscle
- toll like receptor
- traumatic brain injury
- lps induced
- anti inflammatory
- transcription factor
- heart failure
- blood brain barrier
- cognitive impairment
- left ventricular
- small molecule
- machine learning
- multiple sclerosis
- immune response
- atrial fibrillation
- big data
- brain injury
- data analysis
- artificial intelligence
- amino acid
- resting state
- functional connectivity