SCOPE: Mice are usually housed at 20-24 °C. At thermoneutrality (28 °C) larger diet-induced differences in obesity are seen. We tested whether this leads to large differences in metabolic health parameters. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a 14-wk dietary intervention in C57BL/6J mice at 28 °C and assessed adiposity and metabolic health parameters for a semipurified low fat (10 energy%) diet and a moderate high fat (30 energy%) diet. A large and significant diet-induced differential increase in body weight, adipose tissue mass, adipocyte size, serum leptin level, and, to some extent, cholesterol level was observed. No adipose tissue inflammation was seen. No differential effect of the diets on serum glucose, free fatty acids, triacylglycerides, insulin, adiponectin, resistin, PAI-1, MMP-9, sVCAM-1, sICAM-1, sE-selectin, IL-6, ApoE, fibrinogen levels, or HOMA index was observed. Also in muscle no differential effect on mitochondrial density, mitochondrial respiratory control ratio, or mRNA expression of metabolic genes was found. Finally, in liver no differential effect on weight, triacylglycerides level, aconitase/citrate synthase activity ratio was seen. CONCLUSION: Low fat diet and moderate high fat diet induce prominent body weight differences at thermoneutrality, which is not paralleled by metabolic differences. Our data rather suggest that thermoneutrality alters metabolic homeostasis.
SCOPE: Mice are usually housed at 20-24 °C. At thermoneutrality (28 °C) larger diet-induced differences in obesity are seen. We tested whether this leads to large differences in metabolic health parameters. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a 14-wk dietary intervention in C57BL/6J mice at 28 °C and assessed adiposity and metabolic health parameters for a semipurified low fat (10 energy%) diet and a moderate high fat (30 energy%) diet. A large and significant diet-induced differential increase in body weight, adipose tissue mass, adipocyte size, serum leptin level, and, to some extent, cholesterol level was observed. No adipose tissue inflammation was seen. No differential effect of the diets on serum glucose, free fatty acids, triacylglycerides, insulin, adiponectin, resistin, PAI-1, MMP-9, sVCAM-1, sICAM-1, sE-selectin, IL-6, ApoE, fibrinogen levels, or HOMA index was observed. Also in muscle no differential effect on mitochondrial density, mitochondrial respiratory control ratio, or mRNA expression of metabolic genes was found. Finally, in liver no differential effect on weight, triacylglycerides level, aconitase/citrate synthase activity ratio was seen. CONCLUSION: Low fat diet and moderate high fat diet induce prominent body weight differences at thermoneutrality, which is not paralleled by metabolic differences. Our data rather suggest that thermoneutrality alters metabolic homeostasis.
Authors: Femke P M Hoevenaars; Jaap Keijer; Laure Herreman; Inge Palm; Maria A Hegeman; Hans J M Swarts; Evert M van Schothorst Journal: Genes Nutr Date: 2014-04-10 Impact factor: 5.523
Authors: Loes P M Duivenvoorde; Evert M van Schothorst; Hans M Swarts; Ondrej Kuda; Esther Steenbergh; Sander Termeulen; Jan Kopecky; Jaap Keijer Journal: PLoS One Date: 2015-06-22 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Wenbiao Shi; Maria A Hegeman; Dorien A M van Dartel; Jing Tang; Manuel Suarez; Hans Swarts; Bart van der Hee; Lluis Arola; Jaap Keijer Journal: Mol Nutr Food Res Date: 2017-04-13 Impact factor: 5.914
Authors: Femke P M Hoevenaars; Jaap Keijer; Inge van der Stelt; Loes P M Duivenvoorde; Laure Herreman; Robin van Nes; David Friedecký; Maria A Hegeman; Evert M van Schothorst Journal: Genes (Basel) Date: 2019-05-10 Impact factor: 4.096
Authors: Wenbiao Shi; Maria A Hegeman; Atanaska Doncheva; Inge van der Stelt; Melissa Bekkenkamp-Grovenstein; Evert M van Schothorst; Charles Brenner; Vincent C J de Boer; Jaap Keijer Journal: Mol Nutr Food Res Date: 2019-04-16 Impact factor: 5.914