Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Laboratory of Endocrinology, Department of Clinical Chemistry, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Metabolism and Reward Group, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Neuroendocrinol. 2019 May;31(5):e12718. doi: 10.1111/jne.12718. Epub 2019 Apr 24.
Humans have engineered a dietary environment that has driven the global prevalence of obesity and several other chronic metabolic diseases to pandemic levels. To prevent or treat obesity and associated comorbidities, it is crucial that we understand how our dietary environment, especially in combination with a sedentary lifestyle and/or daily-life stress, can dysregulate energy balance and promote the development of an obese state. Substantial mechanistic insight into the maladaptive adaptations underlying caloric overconsumption and excessive weight gain has been gained by analysing brains from rodents that were eating prefabricated nutritionally-complete pellets of high-fat diet (HFD). Although long-term consumption of HFDs induces chronic metabolic diseases, including obesity, they do not model several important characteristics of the modern-day human diet. For example, prefabricated HFDs ignore the (effects of) caloric consumption from a fluid source, do not appear to model the complex interplay in humans between stress and preference for palatable foods, and, importantly, lack any aspect of choice. Therefore, our laboratory uses an obesogenic free-choice high-fat high-sucrose (fc-HFHS) diet paradigm that provides rodents with the opportunity to choose from several diet components, varying in palatability, fluidity, texture, form and nutritive content. Here, we review recent advances in our understanding how the fc-HFHS diet disrupts peripheral metabolic processes and produces adaptations in brain circuitries that govern homeostatic and hedonic components of energy balance. Current insight suggests that the fc-HFHS diet has good construct and face validity to model human diet-induced chronic metabolic diseases, including obesity, because it combines the effects of food palatability and energy density with the stimulating effects of variety and choice. We also highlight how behavioural, physiological and molecular adaptations might differ from those induced by prefabricated HFDs that lack an element of choice. Finally, the advantages and disadvantages of using the fc-HFHS diet for preclinical studies are discussed.
人类已经创造了一种饮食环境,这种环境导致肥胖和其他几种慢性代谢性疾病的全球患病率达到了流行水平。为了预防或治疗肥胖症及其相关合并症,我们必须了解我们的饮食环境,特别是与久坐不动的生活方式和/或日常生活压力相结合,如何扰乱能量平衡并促进肥胖状态的发展。通过分析食用预制的高脂肪饮食(HFD)营养完整颗粒的啮齿动物的大脑,已经对导致热量过度消耗和体重过度增加的适应性适应的机制有了实质性的了解。尽管长期食用 HFD 会导致慢性代谢性疾病,包括肥胖症,但它们不能模拟现代人类饮食的几个重要特征。例如,预制 HFD 忽略了液体来源的热量消耗,似乎不能模拟人类中压力与对美味食物偏好之间的复杂相互作用,而且,重要的是,缺乏任何选择方面。因此,我们的实验室使用致肥胖的自由选择高脂肪高蔗糖(fc-HFHS)饮食范式,使啮齿动物有机会从几种饮食成分中进行选择,这些成分在口感、流动性、质地、形式和营养含量方面各不相同。在这里,我们回顾了我们对 fc-HFHS 饮食如何破坏外周代谢过程并产生调节能量平衡的稳态和愉悦成分的大脑电路适应性的最新理解。目前的研究表明,fc-HFHS 饮食具有良好的结构和表面效度,可以模拟人类饮食引起的慢性代谢性疾病,包括肥胖症,因为它将食物的口感和能量密度的影响与多样性和选择的刺激作用结合在一起。我们还强调了行为、生理和分子适应可能与缺乏选择因素的预制 HFD 诱导的适应不同。最后,讨论了使用 fc-HFHS 饮食进行临床前研究的优缺点。