Discrimination exposure impacts unhealthy processing of food cues: crosstalk between the brain and gut.
Xiaobei ZhangHao WangLisa A KilpatrickTien S DongGilbert C GeeJennifer S LabusVadim OsadchiyHiram Beltran-SanchezMay C WangAllison VaughanArpana GuptaPublished in: Nature mental health (2023)
Experiences of discrimination are associated with adverse health outcomes, including obesity. However, the mechanisms by which discrimination leads to obesity remain unclear. Utilizing multi-omics analyses of neuroimaging and fecal metabolites, we investigated the impact of discrimination exposure on brain reactivity to food images and associated dysregulations in the brain-gut-microbiome system. We show that discrimination is associated with increased food-cue reactivity in frontal-striatal regions involved in reward, motivation and executive control; altered glutamate-pathway metabolites involved in oxidative stress and inflammation as well as preference for unhealthy foods. Associations between discrimination-related brain and gut signatures were skewed towards unhealthy sweet foods after adjusting for age, diet, body mass index, race and socioeconomic status. Discrimination, as a stressor, may contribute to enhanced food-cue reactivity and brain-gut-microbiome disruptions that can promote unhealthy eating behaviors, leading to increased risk for obesity. Treatments that normalize these alterations may benefit individuals who experience discrimination-related stress.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- weight loss
- white matter
- oxidative stress
- functional connectivity
- body mass index
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- weight gain
- physical activity
- ms ms
- cerebral ischemia
- emergency department
- multiple sclerosis
- working memory
- mental health
- dna damage
- gene expression
- single cell
- machine learning
- parkinson disease
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- climate change
- diabetic rats