Cargando…

Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala

A compelling body of evidence suggests that the worldwide obesity epidemic is underpinned by excessive sugar consumption, typified by the modern western diet. Furthermore, evidence is beginning to emerge of maladaptive changes in the mesolimbic reward pathway of the brain in relation to excess sugar...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shariff, Masroor, Klenowski, Paul, Morgan, Michael, Patkar, Omkar, Mu, Erica, Bellingham, Mark, Belmer, Arnauld, Bartlett, Selena E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5558950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28813474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183063
_version_ 1783257471366725632
author Shariff, Masroor
Klenowski, Paul
Morgan, Michael
Patkar, Omkar
Mu, Erica
Bellingham, Mark
Belmer, Arnauld
Bartlett, Selena E.
author_facet Shariff, Masroor
Klenowski, Paul
Morgan, Michael
Patkar, Omkar
Mu, Erica
Bellingham, Mark
Belmer, Arnauld
Bartlett, Selena E.
author_sort Shariff, Masroor
collection PubMed
description A compelling body of evidence suggests that the worldwide obesity epidemic is underpinned by excessive sugar consumption, typified by the modern western diet. Furthermore, evidence is beginning to emerge of maladaptive changes in the mesolimbic reward pathway of the brain in relation to excess sugar consumption that highlights the importance of examining this neural circuitry in an attempt to understand and subsequently mitigate the associated morbidities with obesity. While the basolateral amygdala (BLA) has been shown to mediate the reinforcing properties of drugs of abuse, it has also been shown to play an important role in affective and motivated behaviours and has been shown to undergo maladaptive changes in response to drugs of abuse and stress. Given the overlap in neural circuitry affected by drugs of abuse and sucrose, we sought to examine the effect of short- and long-term binge-like sucrose consumption on the morphology of the BLA principal neurons using an intermittent-access two-bottle choice paradigm. We used Golgi-Cox staining to impregnate principal neurons from the BLA of short- (4 week) and long-term (12 week) sucrose consuming adolescent rats and compared these to age-matched water controls. Our results indicate possibly maladaptive changes to the dendritic architecture of BLA principal neurons, particularly on apical dendrites following long-term sucrose consumption. Specifically, our results show reduced total dendritic arbor length of BLA principal neurons following short- and long-term sucrose consumption. Additionally, we found that long-term binge-like sucrose consumption caused a significant reduction in the length and complexity of apical dendrites. Taken together, our results highlight the differences between short- and long-term binge-like sucrose consumption on BLA principal neuron morphology and are suggestive of a perturbation in the diverse synaptic inputs to these neurons.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5558950
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-55589502017-08-25 Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala Shariff, Masroor Klenowski, Paul Morgan, Michael Patkar, Omkar Mu, Erica Bellingham, Mark Belmer, Arnauld Bartlett, Selena E. PLoS One Research Article A compelling body of evidence suggests that the worldwide obesity epidemic is underpinned by excessive sugar consumption, typified by the modern western diet. Furthermore, evidence is beginning to emerge of maladaptive changes in the mesolimbic reward pathway of the brain in relation to excess sugar consumption that highlights the importance of examining this neural circuitry in an attempt to understand and subsequently mitigate the associated morbidities with obesity. While the basolateral amygdala (BLA) has been shown to mediate the reinforcing properties of drugs of abuse, it has also been shown to play an important role in affective and motivated behaviours and has been shown to undergo maladaptive changes in response to drugs of abuse and stress. Given the overlap in neural circuitry affected by drugs of abuse and sucrose, we sought to examine the effect of short- and long-term binge-like sucrose consumption on the morphology of the BLA principal neurons using an intermittent-access two-bottle choice paradigm. We used Golgi-Cox staining to impregnate principal neurons from the BLA of short- (4 week) and long-term (12 week) sucrose consuming adolescent rats and compared these to age-matched water controls. Our results indicate possibly maladaptive changes to the dendritic architecture of BLA principal neurons, particularly on apical dendrites following long-term sucrose consumption. Specifically, our results show reduced total dendritic arbor length of BLA principal neurons following short- and long-term sucrose consumption. Additionally, we found that long-term binge-like sucrose consumption caused a significant reduction in the length and complexity of apical dendrites. Taken together, our results highlight the differences between short- and long-term binge-like sucrose consumption on BLA principal neuron morphology and are suggestive of a perturbation in the diverse synaptic inputs to these neurons. Public Library of Science 2017-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5558950/ /pubmed/28813474 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183063 Text en © 2017 Shariff et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shariff, Masroor
Klenowski, Paul
Morgan, Michael
Patkar, Omkar
Mu, Erica
Bellingham, Mark
Belmer, Arnauld
Bartlett, Selena E.
Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
title Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
title_full Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
title_fullStr Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
title_full_unstemmed Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
title_short Binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
title_sort binge-like sucrose consumption reduces the dendritic length and complexity of principal neurons in the adolescent rat basolateral amygdala
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5558950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28813474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183063
work_keys_str_mv AT shariffmasroor bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT klenowskipaul bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT morganmichael bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT patkaromkar bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT muerica bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT bellinghammark bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT belmerarnauld bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala
AT bartlettselenae bingelikesucroseconsumptionreducesthedendriticlengthandcomplexityofprincipalneuronsintheadolescentratbasolateralamygdala