Reichelt Amy C
School of Health and Biomedical Sciences, RMIT University Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2016 Oct 13;10:189. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00189. eCollection 2016.
Adolescence poses as both a transitional period in neurodevelopment and lifestyle practices. In particular, the developmental trajectory of the prefrontal cortex (PFC), a critical region for behavioral control and self-regulation, is enduring, not reaching functional maturity until the early 20 s in humans. Furthermore, the neurotransmitter dopamine is particularly abundant during adolescence, tuning the brain to rapidly learn about rewards and regulating aspects of neuroplasticity. Thus, adolescence is proposed to represent a period of vulnerability towards reward-driven behaviors such as the consumption of palatable high fat and high sugar diets. This is reflected in the increasing prevalence of obesity in children and adolescents as they are the greatest consumers of "junk foods". Excessive consumption of diets laden in saturated fat and refined sugars not only leads to weight gain and the development of obesity, but experimental studies with rodents indicate they evoke cognitive deficits in learning and memory process by disrupting neuroplasticity and altering reward processing neurocircuitry. Consumption of these high fat and high sugar diets have been reported to have a particularly pronounced impact on cognition when consumed during adolescence, demonstrating a susceptibility of the adolescent brain to enduring cognitive deficits. The adolescent brain, with heightened reward sensitivity and diminished behavioral control compared to the mature adult brain, appears to be a risk for aberrant eating behaviors that may underpin the development of obesity. This review explores the neurodevelopmental changes in the PFC and mesocortical dopamine signaling that occur during adolescence, and how these potentially underpin the overconsumption of palatable food and development of obesogenic diet-induced cognitive deficits.
青春期既是神经发育的过渡阶段,也是生活方式形成的时期。特别是前额叶皮层(PFC),作为行为控制和自我调节的关键区域,其发育轨迹是持续的,在人类中直到20岁出头才达到功能成熟。此外,神经递质多巴胺在青春期特别丰富,使大脑能够快速了解奖励并调节神经可塑性的各个方面。因此,青春期被认为是一个容易出现受奖励驱动行为的时期,比如食用美味的高脂肪和高糖饮食。这反映在儿童和青少年肥胖率的不断上升上,因为他们是“垃圾食品”的最大消费者。过量食用富含饱和脂肪和精制糖的饮食不仅会导致体重增加和肥胖的发展,而且对啮齿动物的实验研究表明,它们会通过破坏神经可塑性和改变奖励处理神经回路,在学习和记忆过程中引发认知缺陷。据报道,在青春期食用这些高脂肪和高糖饮食对认知有特别明显的影响,表明青少年大脑容易出现持续性认知缺陷。与成熟的成年大脑相比,青少年大脑具有更高的奖励敏感性和更低的行为控制能力,这似乎是异常饮食行为的一个风险因素,而这种行为可能是肥胖发展的基础。这篇综述探讨了青春期前额叶皮层和中脑皮层多巴胺信号的神经发育变化,以及这些变化如何可能导致美味食物的过度消费和致肥胖饮食引起的认知缺陷的发展。