Assessment of the Effects of Dietary Vitamin D Levels on Olanzapine-Induced Metabolic Side Effects: Focus on the Endocannabinoidome-Gut Microbiome Axis.
Armita AbolghasemiClaudia MancaFabio Arturo IannottiMelissa ShenNadine LeblancSébastien LacroixCyril MartinNicolas FlamandVincenzo Di MarzoCristoforo SilvestriPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Vitamin D deficiency is associated with poor mental health and dysmetabolism. Several metabolic abnormalities are associated with psychotic diseases, which can be compounded by atypical antipsychotics that induce weight gain and insulin resistance. These side-effects may be affected by vitamin D levels. The gut microbiota and endocannabinoidome (eCBome) are significant regulators of both metabolism and mental health, but their role in the development of atypical antipsychotic drug metabolic side-effects and their interaction with vitamin D status is unknown. We studied the effects of different combinations of vitamin D levels and atypical antipsychotic drug (olanzapine) exposure on whole-body metabolism and the eCBome-gut microbiota axis in female C57BL/6J mice under a high fat/high sucrose (HFHS) diet in an attempt to identify a link between the latter and the different metabolic outputs induced by the treatments. Olanzapine exerted a protective effect against diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance, largely independent of dietary vitamin D status. These changes were concomitant with olanzapine-mediated decreases in Trpv1 expression and increases in the levels of its agonists, including various N-acylethanolamines and 2-monoacylglycerols, which are consistent with the observed improvement in adiposity and metabolic status. Furthermore, while global gut bacteria community architecture was not altered by olanzapine, we identified changes in the relative abundances of various commensal bacterial families. Taken together, changes of eCBome and gut microbiota families under our experimental conditions might contribute to olanzapine and vitamin D-mediated inhibition of weight gain in mice on a HFHS diet.
Keyphrases
- weight gain
- insulin resistance
- mental health
- high fat diet induced
- weight loss
- body mass index
- birth weight
- chemotherapy induced
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- physical activity
- high fat diet
- skeletal muscle
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- healthcare
- poor prognosis
- drug induced
- emergency department
- oxidative stress
- long non coding rna
- bipolar disorder
- high glucose
- spinal cord
- neuropathic pain
- clinical evaluation