Sierra Julio, Simon Timothy B, Hilal Darine Abu, Torres Yaria Arroyo, Santana José M Santiago, Figueroa Johnny D
Center for Health Disparities and Molecular Medicine, Department of Basic Sciences, Loma Linda University, School of Medicine, Loma Linda, California, USA.
Neuroregeneration Division, Neuroscience Research Laboratory, Natural Sciences Department, University of Puerto Rico Carolina Campus, Puerto Rico.
bioRxiv. 2024 Nov 14:2024.11.12.623254. doi: 10.1101/2024.11.12.623254.
Childhood obesity is a multifactorial disease affecting more than 160 million adolescents worldwide. Adolescent exposure to obesogenic environments, characterized by access to high-fat diets and stress, precipitates maladaptive eating habits in adulthood such as binge eating. Evidence suggests a strong association between Western-like high-saturated-fat (WD) food consumption and dysregulated hormone fluctuations. However, few studies have explored the long-term impact of adolescent WD and psychosocial stress on brain and behavior. This longitudinal study aimed to investigate the impact of adolescent exposure to an obesogenic diet on stress resiliency and increased susceptibility for binge-like eating behaviors. Adolescent male Lewis rats were given WD (41% fat; n=40) or control diet (CD, 16% fat; n=38) for 4 weeks before undergoing a stress paradigm of predator exposure and social instability (CDE, WDE, CDU, WDU; n=16/group). Subjects were provided intermittent WD access (24 h/week) to evaluate binge eating-like behavior in adulthood. Fecal corticosterone and testosterone were measured at four timepoints throughout adolescence and adulthood. WD rats exhibited increased body weight (p = 0.0217) and elevated testosterone in mid-adolescence (p=0.0312) and blunted stress-induced corticosterone response in mid-late adolescence (CDE:WDE, p=0.028). Adolescent hormone levels were negatively correlated with bingeing and explained the variability between adult rats expressing hyperphagic and hypophagic behaviors. These results demonstrate that exposure to WD in adolescence disrupts hormone fluctuations and stress responsivity, with effects persisting into adulthood. This underscores the importance of addressing obesogenic environments early to mitigate their lasting impact on hormone regulation and stress responsiveness.
儿童肥胖是一种多因素疾病,全球有超过1.6亿青少年受其影响。青少年暴露于以高脂饮食和压力为特征的致肥胖环境中,会导致成年后出现暴饮暴食等不良饮食习惯。有证据表明,西式高饱和脂肪(WD)食物消费与激素波动失调之间存在密切关联。然而,很少有研究探讨青少年WD和心理社会压力对大脑和行为的长期影响。这项纵向研究旨在调查青少年暴露于致肥胖饮食对压力恢复力和暴饮暴食样行为易感性增加的影响。青春期雄性Lewis大鼠在接受捕食者暴露和社会不稳定的应激范式(CDE、WDE、CDU、WDU;每组n = 16)之前,给予WD(41%脂肪;n = 40)或对照饮食(CD,16%脂肪;n = 38)4周。为评估成年后的暴饮暴食样行为,为实验对象提供间歇性WD摄入(每周24小时)。在整个青春期和成年期的四个时间点测量粪便皮质酮和睾酮。WD大鼠体重增加(p = 0.0217),青春期中期睾酮升高(p = 0.0312),青春期中后期应激诱导的皮质酮反应减弱(CDE:WDE,p = 0.028)。青少年激素水平与暴饮暴食呈负相关,并解释了成年大鼠表现出多食和少食行为之间的差异。这些结果表明,青春期暴露于WD会扰乱激素波动和应激反应,且这种影响会持续到成年期。这凸显了尽早应对致肥胖环境以减轻其对激素调节和应激反应性的持久影响的重要性。