Cargando…

Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet

Many reports detail taste dysfunction in humans and animals with obesity. For example, mice consuming an obesogenic diet for a short period have fewer taste buds than their lean littermates. Further, rats with diet-induced obesity (DIO) show blunted electrophysiological responses to taste in the bra...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Harnischfeger, Fiona, O’Connell, Flynn, Weiss, Michael, Axelrod, Brandon, Hajnal, Andras, Czaja, Krzysztof, Di Lorenzo, Patricia M., Dando, Robin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8465157/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34578940
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13093062
_version_ 1784572799482855424
author Harnischfeger, Fiona
O’Connell, Flynn
Weiss, Michael
Axelrod, Brandon
Hajnal, Andras
Czaja, Krzysztof
Di Lorenzo, Patricia M.
Dando, Robin
author_facet Harnischfeger, Fiona
O’Connell, Flynn
Weiss, Michael
Axelrod, Brandon
Hajnal, Andras
Czaja, Krzysztof
Di Lorenzo, Patricia M.
Dando, Robin
author_sort Harnischfeger, Fiona
collection PubMed
description Many reports detail taste dysfunction in humans and animals with obesity. For example, mice consuming an obesogenic diet for a short period have fewer taste buds than their lean littermates. Further, rats with diet-induced obesity (DIO) show blunted electrophysiological responses to taste in the brainstem. Here, we studied the effects of high energy diet (HED)-induced peripheral taste damage in rats, and whether this deficiency could be reversed by returning to a regular chow diet. Separate groups of rats consumed a standard chow diet (Chow), a HED for 10 weeks followed by a return to chow (HED/chow), or a HED for 10 weeks followed by a restricted HED that was isocaloric with consumption by the HED/chow group (HED/isocal). Fungiform taste papilla (FP) and circumvallate taste bud abundance were quantified several months after HED groups switched diets. Results showed that both HED/chow and HED/isocal rats had significantly fewer FP and lower CV taste bud abundance than control rats fed only chow. Neutrophil infiltration into taste tissues was also quantified, but did not vary with treatment on this timeline. Finally, the number of cells undergoing programmed cell death, measured with caspase-3 staining, inversely correlated with taste bud counts, suggesting taste buds may be lost to apoptosis as a potential mechanism for the taste dysfunction observed in obesity. Collectively, these data show that DIO has lasting deleterious effects on the peripheral taste system, despite a change from a HED to a healthy diet, underscoring the idea that obesity rather than diet predicts damage to the taste system.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8465157
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-84651572021-09-27 Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet Harnischfeger, Fiona O’Connell, Flynn Weiss, Michael Axelrod, Brandon Hajnal, Andras Czaja, Krzysztof Di Lorenzo, Patricia M. Dando, Robin Nutrients Article Many reports detail taste dysfunction in humans and animals with obesity. For example, mice consuming an obesogenic diet for a short period have fewer taste buds than their lean littermates. Further, rats with diet-induced obesity (DIO) show blunted electrophysiological responses to taste in the brainstem. Here, we studied the effects of high energy diet (HED)-induced peripheral taste damage in rats, and whether this deficiency could be reversed by returning to a regular chow diet. Separate groups of rats consumed a standard chow diet (Chow), a HED for 10 weeks followed by a return to chow (HED/chow), or a HED for 10 weeks followed by a restricted HED that was isocaloric with consumption by the HED/chow group (HED/isocal). Fungiform taste papilla (FP) and circumvallate taste bud abundance were quantified several months after HED groups switched diets. Results showed that both HED/chow and HED/isocal rats had significantly fewer FP and lower CV taste bud abundance than control rats fed only chow. Neutrophil infiltration into taste tissues was also quantified, but did not vary with treatment on this timeline. Finally, the number of cells undergoing programmed cell death, measured with caspase-3 staining, inversely correlated with taste bud counts, suggesting taste buds may be lost to apoptosis as a potential mechanism for the taste dysfunction observed in obesity. Collectively, these data show that DIO has lasting deleterious effects on the peripheral taste system, despite a change from a HED to a healthy diet, underscoring the idea that obesity rather than diet predicts damage to the taste system. MDPI 2021-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8465157/ /pubmed/34578940 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13093062 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Harnischfeger, Fiona
O’Connell, Flynn
Weiss, Michael
Axelrod, Brandon
Hajnal, Andras
Czaja, Krzysztof
Di Lorenzo, Patricia M.
Dando, Robin
Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet
title Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet
title_full Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet
title_fullStr Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet
title_full_unstemmed Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet
title_short Sprague Dawley Rats Gaining Weight on a High Energy Diet Exhibit Damage to Taste Tissue Even after Return to a Healthy Diet
title_sort sprague dawley rats gaining weight on a high energy diet exhibit damage to taste tissue even after return to a healthy diet
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8465157/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34578940
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13093062
work_keys_str_mv AT harnischfegerfiona spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT oconnellflynn spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT weissmichael spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT axelrodbrandon spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT hajnalandras spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT czajakrzysztof spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT dilorenzopatriciam spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet
AT dandorobin spraguedawleyratsgainingweightonahighenergydietexhibitdamagetotastetissueevenafterreturntoahealthydiet