Literature DB >> 30918865

The effect of dietary fat on behavior in mice.

Madeline Rose Keleher1,2, Rabab Zaidi2, Kayna Patel2, Amer Ahmed2, Carlee Bettler2, Cassondra Pavlatos2, Shyam Shah2, James M Cheverud2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Obesity is linked to cognitive dysfunction in humans and rodents, and its effects can be passed on to the next generation. However, the extent of these effects is not well understood. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of a prenatal maternal high-fat diet and an individual high-fat diet in inbred mice.
METHODS: We varied maternal diet and offspring diet to test the hypothesis that a high-fat diet would increase anxiety, reduce activity levels, and impair nest-building. First, we fed a high-fat (HF) or low-fat (LF) diet to genetically identical female Small (SM/J) mice and mated them with LF males. We cross-fostered all offspring to LF-fed SM/J nurses and weaned them onto an HF or LF diet. We weighed the mice weekly and we tested anxiety with the Open Field Test, activity levels with instantaneous scan sampling, and nest building using the Deacon Scale.
RESULTS: Diet significantly affected weight, with HF females weighing 28.2 g (± 1.4 g SE) and LF females weighing 15.1 g (± 1.6 g SE) at 17 weeks old. The offspring's own diet had major behavioral effects. HF mice produced more fecal boli and urinations in the Open Field Test, built lower-quality nests, and had lower activity in adulthood than LF mice. The only trait that a prenatal maternal diet significantly affected was whether the offspring built their nests inside or outside of a hut.
CONCLUSIONS: Offspring diet, but not prenatal maternal diet, affected a wide range of behaviors in these mice.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Activity; Anxiety; Diet; Mice; Nest; Obesity

Year:  2018        PMID: 30918865      PMCID: PMC6405378          DOI: 10.1007/s40200-018-0373-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Diabetes Metab Disord        ISSN: 2251-6581


  42 in total

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Review 4.  Western diet consumption and cognitive impairment: links to hippocampal dysfunction and obesity.

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5.  Maternal high-fat diet in mice programs emotional behavior in adulthood.

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9.  The effect of dietary fat intake on hepatic gene expression in LG/J AND SM/J mice.

Authors:  Charlyn G Partridge; Gloria L Fawcett; Bing Wang; Clay F Semenkovich; James M Cheverud
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Authors:  Silvia S Kang; Aishe Kurti; Damien A Fair; John D Fryer
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  2 in total

Review 1.  The Effect of High Fat Diet on Cerebrovascular Health and Pathology: A Species Comparative Review.

Authors:  Benjamin Zimmerman; Payel Kundu; William D Rooney; Jacob Raber
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-06-04       Impact factor: 4.411

2.  β-glucan attenuates cognitive impairment via the gut-brain axis in diet-induced obese mice.

Authors:  Hongli Shi; Yinghua Yu; Danhong Lin; Peng Zheng; Peng Zhang; Minmin Hu; Qiao Wang; Wei Pan; Xiaoying Yang; Tao Hu; Qianqian Li; Renxian Tang; Feng Zhou; Kuiyang Zheng; Xu-Feng Huang
Journal:  Microbiome       Date:  2020-10-02       Impact factor: 14.650

  2 in total

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