| Literature DB >> 33324346 |
Abstract
Excessive dietary fat intake has extensive impacts on several physiological systems and can lead to metabolic and nonmetabolic disease. In animal models of ingestion, exposure to a high fat diet during pregnancy predisposes offspring to increase intake of dietary fat and causes increase in weight gain that can lead to obesity, and without intervention, these physiological and behavioral consequences can persist for several generations. The hypothalamus is a region of the brain that responds to physiological hunger and fullness and contains orexigenic neuropeptide systems that have long been associated with dietary fat intake. The past fifteen years of research show that prenatal exposure to a high fat diet increases neurogenesis of these neuropeptide systems in offspring brain and are correlated to behavioral changes that induce a pro-consummatory and obesogenic phenotype. Current research has uncovered several potential molecular mechanisms by which excessive dietary fat alters the hypothalamus and involve dietary fatty acids, the immune system, gut microbiota, and transcriptional and epigenetic changes. This review will examine the current knowledge of dietary fat-associated changes in the hypothalamus and the potential pathways involved in modifying the development of orexigenic peptide neurons that lead to changes in ingestive behavior, with a special emphasis on inflammation by chemokines.Entities:
Keywords: chemokines; high-fat diet; hypothalamus; inflammation; maternal high-fat diet; orexigenic neuropeptides
Year: 2020 PMID: 33324346 PMCID: PMC7726204 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.591559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Hunger and satiety can stimulate the release of gut neuropeptides that directly signal the hypothalamus. Ghrelin, released from the stomach during hunger, activates the orexigenic peptide neurons in the hypothalamus to signal food intake, whereas cholecystokinin (CCK) from the intestine, insulin from the pancreas, or leptin from adipose tissue, inhibits orexigenic neuropeptide signaling in the hypothalamus to signal satiety and high levels of macronutrients. Diets rich in fats can directly impact activation of the orexigenic neuropeptide signaling in the hypothalamus, leading to increased ingestive behavior, and additionally induce a state of inflammation. Inflammatory mediators have also been shown to affect orexigenic neuropeptides in the hypothalamus. Other neurotransmitters, such as glutamate and GABA, have also been shown to stimulate orexigenic neuropeptide release and can lead to increase in dietary fat intake.
Figure 2Prenatal high-fat diet exposure impacts several aspects of offspring physiology and behavior that leads to excessive dietary fat intake and increasing the risk for obesity.
Figure 3Prenatal high-fat diet ingestion can increase circulating levels of CXCL12 in pregnant rats and also induces in offspring several changes in both behavior and in orexigenic peptide neurons in the arcuate nucleus (ARC), perifornical lateral hypothalamus (PFLH), and in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN). Prenatal HFD and prenatal CXCL12 overlap in their effects in offspring on increasing ENK levels in the PVN, and in increasing high-fat diet intake and anxiety-like behaviors.