| Literature DB >> 28261067 |
Jean-Pascal Morin1, Luis F Rodríguez-Durán2, Kioko Guzmán-Ramos3, Claudia Perez-Cruz4, Guillaume Ferreira5, Sofia Diaz-Cintra6, Gustavo Pacheco-López7.
Abstract
Neural plasticity is an intrinsic and essential characteristic of the nervous system that allows animals "self-tuning" to adapt to their environment over their lifetime. Activity-dependent synaptic plasticity in the central nervous system is a form of neural plasticity that underlies learning and memory formation, as well as long-lasting, environmentally-induced maladaptive behaviors, such as drug addiction and overeating of palatable hyper-caloric (PHc) food. In western societies, the abundance of PHc foods has caused a dramatic increase in the incidence of overweight/obesity and related disorders. To this regard, it has been suggested that increased adiposity may be caused at least in part by behavioral changes in the affected individuals that are induced by the chronic consumption of PHc foods; some authors have even drawn attention to the similarity that exists between over-indulgent eating and drug addiction. Long-term misuse of certain dietary components has also been linked to chronic neuroimmune maladaptation that may predispose individuals to neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease. In this review article, we discuss recent evidence that shows how consumption of PHc food can cause maladaptive neural plasticity that converts short-term ingestive drives into compulsive behaviors. We also discuss the neural mechanisms of how chronic consumption of PHc foods may alter brain function and lead to cognitive impairments, focusing on prenatal, childhood and adolescence as vulnerable neurodevelopmental stages to dietary environmental insults. Finally, we outline a societal agenda for harnessing permissive obesogenic environments.Entities:
Keywords: adiposity; food addiction; hedonics; indulgent eating; neural plasticity; neuroinflammation; obesity; overweight
Year: 2017 PMID: 28261067 PMCID: PMC5306218 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Theoretical framework as Venn diagram showing intersections of learning and memory, drug addiction and indulgent eating (see text for details).
Figure 2(A) When the obesogenic environment overlaps critical neurodevelopmental periods, enhanced maladaptive neural plasticity may be expected; which could eventually lead to uncontrolled ingestive behavior (food addiction). Interplay of food reward and homeostatic ingestive behavior may evolve in wilderness to promote biological fitness under extremely different evolutionary pressures; e.g., scarcity and unpredictable access to food, low dense caloric food, large caloric investments in foraging/hunting. (B) Obesogenic environment driven by palatable hyper-caloric (PHc) food can be experimentally modeled in rodents by exposure to high carbohydrate/high fat diet (HFD) resulting in increased adiposity evidenced by body composition analysis by micro-computed tomography; yellow = sub cutaneous fat/pink = visceral fat, blue = lean mass, ultimately causing diet induced obesity (DIO). Experimental evidence documents that exposure to a high carbohydrate/HFD negatively impact on cognitive functions, with increased sensitivity during prenatal, childhood and adolescence neurodevelopmental stages. In particular, hippocampal (Hipp) and pre-frontal cortex (PFC) dependent tasks are negatively impaired; whereas amygdala (Amy) dependent function seems to be enhanced. Cognitive impairments are accompanied (or preceded) by ingestive addictive behaviors driven by the dopaminergic reward system that initiates its projections on the ventral tegmental area (VTA) directly innervating the Amy, PFC, as well as the nucleus accumbens (NAcc; Lisman and Grace, 2005; Russo and Nestler, 2013), the brain structure assessing the hedonic and saliency stimuli properties. It should be remarked that direct projections from VTA to Hipp are on current debate (Takeuchi et al., 2016), thus are depicted with a dash-line. The “reward deficiency syndrome” propose that addiction vulnerability results on from hyporesponsiveness of the midbrain dopaminergic system, leading individuals to seek out and engage in addictive behaviors in order to compensate for underarousal (George et al., 2012), which is in line to the theory of food addiction (Volkow and Wise, 2005; Davis et al., 2011) in particular for PHc food (Ifland et al., 2009; Schulte et al., 2015).
Glossary.
| Diet induced obesity (DIO) | Procedure to expose experimental subjects to a hypercaloric diet intervention (e.g., HFD, Western diet). |
| High fat diet (HFD) | Diet used on pre-clinical experiments usually with at least 45 kcal% from fat (predominately lard). In contrast a control diet contains 10 kcal% from fat. |
| Homeostatic synaptic scaling | Homeostatic synaptic scaling or simply synaptic scaling is a post-synaptic synaptic plasticity mechanism that changes the global level of postsynaptic AMPA receptors according to a neuron’s activity history. |
| Long term depression (LTD) | Sustained, use-dependent decrease of the efficiency of a connection between two or more neurons |
| Long term potentiation (LTP) | Sustained, use-dependent increase of the efficiency of a connection between two or more neurons |
| Indulgent eating | Indulgent behavior caused by loss of self-control is characterized by time-inconsistent preferences, or a tendency to overweigh short-term rewards relative to more distant ones, and a tendency in the short term to ignore the costs of one’s actions. Thus indulgent eating in some case might be the first step of overeating and other eating behavior disorders. |
| Metaplasticity | Phenomenon by which the activity history of a given synapse determines its susceptibility to further activity-dependent modification as well as the nature of such modification. |
| Outcome devaluation | Outcome devaluation occurs when a food reward used during training is devalued by allowing free access to it or by pairing it with an aversive consequence such as gastric malaise. |
| Overeating/hyperphagia | Is the excess food ingestion in relation to the energy that an organism expends, resulting in overweight/obesity phenotype. It might be related to hypothalamic hyperphagia disorders. |
| Palatability | Is the hedonic reward provided by foods which often varies relative to the homeostatic satisfaction of nutritional, water, or energy needs. |
| Pattern completion | Ability to recall an entire memory when presented with a partial sensory cue. |
| Roux-En-Y gastric bypass surgery | Surgical procedure in which the proximal part of the stomach is cut from the rest. The small intestine is then cut and its distal part is attached to the newly formed pouch below the esophagus, while the proximal part (connected to the larger remaining portion of the stomach) is attached further down. This procedure has been successfully employed in humans to treat morbid obesity. |
| Synaptic pruning | Widespread process of synapse elimination that occurs during childhood and adolescence, in an experience-dependent fashion. |
| Synaptic stripping | Removal of dysfunctional synapses by activated microglia. |
| Western diet (also known as cafeteria diet) | Diet used on pre-clinical experiments where the animal self-selects from palatable, readily available foods including cookies, candy, cheese and processed meats. These foods contain a substantial amount of salt, sugar and fat, which are meant to simulate the human Western diet. |