Frank-Podlech Sabine, Heinze Jaana M, Machann Jürgen, Scheffler Klaus, Camps Guido, Fritsche Andreas, Rosenberger Melanie, Hinrichs Jörg, Veit Ralf, Preissl Hubert
Institute for Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Institute for Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases of the Helmholtz Center Munich at the University of Tübingen, German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), Tübingen, Germany.
Front Neurosci. 2019 Jul 10;13:725. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00725. eCollection 2019.
The amount of fat in ingested food dictates specific activation patterns in the brain, particularly in homeostatic and reward-related areas. Taste-specific brain activation changes have also been shown and the sensitivity to the oral perception of fat is associated with differential eating behavior and physiological parameters. The association between oral fat sensitivity and neuronal network functions has, however, not yet been defined. We aimed to investigate the association between fat-dependent neuronal functional connectivity patterns and oral fat sensitivity. To investigate the underlying changes in network dynamics caused by fat intake, we measured resting-state functional connectivity in 11 normal-weight male participants before and after a high- vs. a low-fat meal on two separate study days. Oral fat sensitivity was also measured on both days. We used a high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequence to measure any connectivity changes in networks with the seed in the brainstem (nucleus tractus solitarii, NTS), in homeostatic (hypothalamus) and in reward regions (ventral and dorsal striatum). Seed-based functional connectivity (FC) maps were analyzed using factorial analyses and correlation analyses with oral fat sensitivity were also performed. Regardless of fat content, FC between NTS and reward and gustatory areas was lower after ingestion. Oral fat sensitivity was positively correlated with FC between homeostatic regions and limbic areas in the high-fat condition, but negatively correlated with FC between the dorsal striatum and somatosensory regions in the low-fat condition. Our results show the interaction of oral fat sensitivity with the network based neuronal processing of high- vs. low-fat meals. Variations in neuronal connectivity network patterns might therefore be a possible moderator of the association of oral fat sensitivity and eating behavior.
摄入食物中的脂肪含量决定了大脑中的特定激活模式,尤其是在稳态和奖励相关区域。特定味觉的大脑激活变化也已得到证实,对脂肪口腔感知的敏感性与不同的饮食行为和生理参数相关。然而,口腔脂肪敏感性与神经网络功能之间的关联尚未明确。我们旨在研究脂肪依赖性神经元功能连接模式与口腔脂肪敏感性之间的关联。为了研究脂肪摄入引起的网络动力学潜在变化,我们在两个不同的研究日,分别测量了11名正常体重男性参与者在高脂餐和低脂餐前后的静息态功能连接。同时在这两天也测量了口腔脂肪敏感性。我们使用高分辨率功能磁共振成像(MRI)序列来测量以脑干(孤束核,NTS)、稳态区域(下丘脑)和奖励区域(腹侧和背侧纹状体)为种子点的网络中的任何连接变化。基于种子点的功能连接(FC)图通过因子分析进行分析,并与口腔脂肪敏感性进行相关性分析。无论脂肪含量如何,摄入后NTS与奖励和味觉区域之间的FC均降低。在高脂条件下,口腔脂肪敏感性与稳态区域和边缘区域之间的FC呈正相关,但在低脂条件下与背侧纹状体和体感区域之间的FC呈负相关。我们的结果显示了口腔脂肪敏感性与高脂餐和低脂餐基于网络的神经元处理之间的相互作用。因此,神经元连接网络模式的变化可能是口腔脂肪敏感性与饮食行为关联的一个潜在调节因素。