Hunter Ian, Soler Amanda, Joseph Gregory, Hutcheson Brenda, Bradford Chastity, Zhang Frank Fan, Potter Barry, Proctor Spencer, Rocic Petra
Department of Pharmacology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York.
Department of Biology, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, Alabama.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2017 Apr 1;312(4):H742-H751. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00535.2016. Epub 2017 Jan 13.
Thirty percent of the world population is diagnosed with metabolic syndrome. High-fat/high-sucrose (HF/HS) diet (Western diet) correlates with metabolic syndrome prevalence. We characterized effects of the HF/HS diet on vascular (arterial stiffness, vasoreactivity, and coronary collateral development) and cardiac (echocardiography) function, oxidative stress, and inflammation in a rat model of metabolic syndrome (JCR rats). Furthermore, we determined whether male versus female animals were affected differentially by the Western diet. Cardiovascular function in JCR male rats was impaired versus normal Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. HF/HS diet compromised cardiovascular (dys)function in JCR but not SD male rats. In contrast, cardiovascular function was minimally impaired in JCR female rats on normal chow. However, cardiovascular function in JCR female rats on the HF/HS diet deteriorated to levels comparable to JCR male rats on the HF/HS diet. Similarly, oxidative stress was markedly increased in male but not female JCR rats on normal chow but was equally exacerbated by the HF/HS diet in male and female JCR rats. These results indicate that the Western diet enhances oxidative stress and cardiovascular dysfunction in metabolic syndrome and eliminates the protective effect of female sex on cardiovascular function, implying that both males and females with metabolic syndrome are at equal risk for cardiovascular disease. Western diet abolished protective effect of sex against cardiovascular disease (CVD) development in premenopausal animals with metabolic syndrome. Western diet accelerates progression of CVD in male and female animals with preexisting metabolic syndrome but not normal animals. Exacerbation of baseline oxidative stress correlates with accelerated progression of CVD in metabolic syndrome animals on Western diet.
全球30%的人口被诊断患有代谢综合征。高脂肪/高糖(HF/HS)饮食(西方饮食)与代谢综合征的患病率相关。我们在代谢综合征大鼠模型(JCR大鼠)中,研究了HF/HS饮食对血管(动脉僵硬度、血管反应性和冠状动脉侧支循环发育)和心脏(超声心动图)功能、氧化应激及炎症的影响。此外,我们还确定了雄性和雌性动物对西方饮食的反应是否存在差异。与正常的Sprague-Dawley(SD)大鼠相比,JCR雄性大鼠的心血管功能受损。HF/HS饮食损害了JCR雄性大鼠的心血管(功能),但对SD雄性大鼠没有影响。相比之下,正常饮食的JCR雌性大鼠的心血管功能仅有轻微受损。然而,食用HF/HS饮食的JCR雌性大鼠的心血管功能恶化到了与食用HF/HS饮食的JCR雄性大鼠相当的水平。同样,正常饮食的JCR雄性大鼠的氧化应激显著增加,而雌性大鼠没有,但HF/HS饮食使JCR雄性和雌性大鼠的氧化应激同样加剧。这些结果表明,西方饮食会增加代谢综合征中的氧化应激和心血管功能障碍,并消除了雌性对心血管功能的保护作用,这意味着患有代谢综合征的男性和女性患心血管疾病的风险相同。西方饮食消除了代谢综合征绝经前动物中性别对心血管疾病(CVD)发展的保护作用。西方饮食加速了患有代谢综合征的雄性和雌性动物的CVD进展,但对正常动物没有影响。在西方饮食的代谢综合征动物中,基线氧化应激的加剧与CVD的加速进展相关。