Department of Pharmacology, Physiology and Neuroscience, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, 6439 Garner's Ferry Road, D40, Columbia, SC 29208, United States.
Behav Brain Res. 2011 Sep 12;222(1):230-5. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2011.03.052. Epub 2011 Mar 31.
Ongoing epidemiological studies estimate that greater than 60% of the adult US population may be categorized as either overweight or obese. There is a growing appreciation that the complications of obesity extend to the central nervous system (CNS) and may result in increased risk for neurological co-morbidities like depressive illness. One potential mechanistic mediator linking obesity and depressive illness is the adipocyte derived hormone leptin. We previously demonstrated that lentivirus-mediated downregulation of hypothalamic insulin receptors increases body weight, adiposity and plasma leptin levels, which is consistent with features of the metabolic syndrome. Using this novel model of obesity, we examined performance in the forced swim test (FST), the sucrose preference test and the elevated plus maze (EPM), approaches that are often used as measures of depressive-like and anxiety-like behaviors, in rats that received third ventricular injections of either an insulin receptor antisense lentivirus (hypo-IRAS) or a control lentivirus (hypo-Con). Hypo-IRAS rats exhibited significant increases in immobility time and corresponding decreases in active behaviors in the FST and exhibited anhedonia as measured by decreased sucrose intake compared to hypo-Con rats. Hypo-IRAS rats also exhibited increases in anxiety-like behaviors in the EPM. Plasma, hippocampal and amygdalar brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels were reduced in hypo-IRAS rats, suggesting that the obesity/hyperleptinemic phenotype may elicit this behavioral phenotype through modulation of neurotrophic factor expression. Collectively, these data support the hypothesis for an increased risk for mood disorders in obesity, which may be related to decreased expression of hippocampal and amygdalar BDNF.
正在进行的流行病学研究估计,超过 60%的美国成年人可能被归类为超重或肥胖。人们越来越认识到,肥胖的并发症延伸到中枢神经系统 (CNS),并可能导致神经合并症的风险增加,如抑郁症。将肥胖症与抑郁症联系起来的一个潜在机制介质是脂肪细胞衍生的激素瘦素。我们之前的研究表明,慢病毒介导的下丘脑胰岛素受体下调会增加体重、肥胖和血浆瘦素水平,这与代谢综合征的特征一致。使用这种新型肥胖模型,我们检查了强迫游泳试验 (FST)、蔗糖偏好试验和高架十字迷宫 (EPM) 的表现,这些方法通常被用作抑郁样和焦虑样行为的测量方法,在接受第三脑室注射胰岛素受体反义慢病毒 (hypo-IRAS) 或对照慢病毒 (hypo-Con) 的大鼠中。Hypo-IRAS 大鼠在 FST 中表现出明显的不动时间增加和相应的活跃行为减少,并表现出快感缺失,表现为蔗糖摄入量减少,与 hypo-Con 大鼠相比。Hypo-IRAS 大鼠在 EPM 中也表现出焦虑样行为增加。Hypo-IRAS 大鼠的血浆、海马和杏仁核脑源性神经营养因子 (BDNF) 水平降低,表明肥胖/高瘦素血症表型可能通过调节神经营养因子表达引起这种行为表型。总的来说,这些数据支持肥胖症患者患情绪障碍风险增加的假设,这可能与海马和杏仁核 BDNF 表达减少有关。