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Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?

Reduced function of the serotonin transporter (SERT) is associated with increased susceptibility to anxiety and depression and with type-2 diabetes, which is especially true in older women. Preference for a “Western diet” (WD), enriched with saturated fat, cholesterol, and sugars, may aggravate thes...

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Autores principales: Veniaminova, Ekaterina, Cespuglio, Raymond, Chernukha, Irina, Schmitt-Boehrer, Angelika G., Morozov, Sergey, Kalueff, Allan V., Kuznetsova, Oxana, Anthony, Daniel C., Lesch, Klaus-Peter, Strekalova, Tatyana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7041415/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32132889
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2020.00024
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author Veniaminova, Ekaterina
Cespuglio, Raymond
Chernukha, Irina
Schmitt-Boehrer, Angelika G.
Morozov, Sergey
Kalueff, Allan V.
Kuznetsova, Oxana
Anthony, Daniel C.
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Strekalova, Tatyana
author_facet Veniaminova, Ekaterina
Cespuglio, Raymond
Chernukha, Irina
Schmitt-Boehrer, Angelika G.
Morozov, Sergey
Kalueff, Allan V.
Kuznetsova, Oxana
Anthony, Daniel C.
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Strekalova, Tatyana
author_sort Veniaminova, Ekaterina
collection PubMed
description Reduced function of the serotonin transporter (SERT) is associated with increased susceptibility to anxiety and depression and with type-2 diabetes, which is especially true in older women. Preference for a “Western diet” (WD), enriched with saturated fat, cholesterol, and sugars, may aggravate these conditions. In previous studies, decreased glucose tolerance, central and peripheral inflammation, dyslipidemia, emotional, cognitive, and social abnormalities were reported in WD-fed young female mice. We investigated the metabolic, molecular, and behavioral changes associated with a 3-week-long dietary regime of either the WD or control diet in 12-month-old female mice with three different Sert genotypes: homozygous (Slc6a4) gene knockout (Sert(−/−): KO), heterozygous (Sert(+/−): HET), or wild-type mice (Sert(+/+): WT). In the WT-WD and KO-WD groups, but not in HET-WD-fed mice, most of changes induced by the WD paralleled those found in the younger mice, including brain overexpression of inflammatory marker Toll-like receptor 4 (Tlr4) and impaired hippocampus-dependent performance in the marble test. However, the 12-month-old female mice became obese. Control diet KO mice exhibited impaired hippocampal-dependent behaviors, increased brain expression of the serotonin receptors Htr2c and Htr1b, as well as increased Tlr4 and mitochondrial regulator, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma-coactivator-1a (Ppargc1a). Paradoxically, these, and other changes, were reversed in KO-WD mutants, suggesting a complex interplay between Sert deficiency and metabolic factors as well as potential compensatory molecular mechanisms that might be disrupted by the WD exposure. Most, but not all, of the changes in gene expression in the brain and liver of KO mice were not exhibited by the HET mice fed with either diet. Some of the WD-induced changes were similar in the KO-WD and HET-WD-fed mice, but the latter displayed a “rescued” phenotype in terms of diet-induced abnormalities in glucose tolerance, neuroinflammation, and hippocampus-dependent performance. Thus, complete versus partial Sert inactivation in aged mice results in distinct metabolic, molecular, and behavioral consequences in response to the WD. Our findings show that Sert(+/−) mice are resilient to certain environmental challenges and support the concept of heterosis as evolutionary adaptive mechanism.
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spelling pubmed-70414152020-03-04 Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity? Veniaminova, Ekaterina Cespuglio, Raymond Chernukha, Irina Schmitt-Boehrer, Angelika G. Morozov, Sergey Kalueff, Allan V. Kuznetsova, Oxana Anthony, Daniel C. Lesch, Klaus-Peter Strekalova, Tatyana Front Neurosci Neuroscience Reduced function of the serotonin transporter (SERT) is associated with increased susceptibility to anxiety and depression and with type-2 diabetes, which is especially true in older women. Preference for a “Western diet” (WD), enriched with saturated fat, cholesterol, and sugars, may aggravate these conditions. In previous studies, decreased glucose tolerance, central and peripheral inflammation, dyslipidemia, emotional, cognitive, and social abnormalities were reported in WD-fed young female mice. We investigated the metabolic, molecular, and behavioral changes associated with a 3-week-long dietary regime of either the WD or control diet in 12-month-old female mice with three different Sert genotypes: homozygous (Slc6a4) gene knockout (Sert(−/−): KO), heterozygous (Sert(+/−): HET), or wild-type mice (Sert(+/+): WT). In the WT-WD and KO-WD groups, but not in HET-WD-fed mice, most of changes induced by the WD paralleled those found in the younger mice, including brain overexpression of inflammatory marker Toll-like receptor 4 (Tlr4) and impaired hippocampus-dependent performance in the marble test. However, the 12-month-old female mice became obese. Control diet KO mice exhibited impaired hippocampal-dependent behaviors, increased brain expression of the serotonin receptors Htr2c and Htr1b, as well as increased Tlr4 and mitochondrial regulator, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma-coactivator-1a (Ppargc1a). Paradoxically, these, and other changes, were reversed in KO-WD mutants, suggesting a complex interplay between Sert deficiency and metabolic factors as well as potential compensatory molecular mechanisms that might be disrupted by the WD exposure. Most, but not all, of the changes in gene expression in the brain and liver of KO mice were not exhibited by the HET mice fed with either diet. Some of the WD-induced changes were similar in the KO-WD and HET-WD-fed mice, but the latter displayed a “rescued” phenotype in terms of diet-induced abnormalities in glucose tolerance, neuroinflammation, and hippocampus-dependent performance. Thus, complete versus partial Sert inactivation in aged mice results in distinct metabolic, molecular, and behavioral consequences in response to the WD. Our findings show that Sert(+/−) mice are resilient to certain environmental challenges and support the concept of heterosis as evolutionary adaptive mechanism. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7041415/ /pubmed/32132889 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2020.00024 Text en Copyright © 2020 Veniaminova, Cespuglio, Chernukha, Schmitt-Boehrer, Morozov, Kalueff, Kuznetsova, Anthony, Lesch and Strekalova. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Veniaminova, Ekaterina
Cespuglio, Raymond
Chernukha, Irina
Schmitt-Boehrer, Angelika G.
Morozov, Sergey
Kalueff, Allan V.
Kuznetsova, Oxana
Anthony, Daniel C.
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Strekalova, Tatyana
Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?
title Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?
title_full Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?
title_fullStr Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?
title_short Metabolic, Molecular, and Behavioral Effects of Western Diet in Serotonin Transporter-Deficient Mice: Rescue by Heterozygosity?
title_sort metabolic, molecular, and behavioral effects of western diet in serotonin transporter-deficient mice: rescue by heterozygosity?
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7041415/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32132889
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2020.00024
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