Nutrients (Feb 2022)

Dietary Conjugated Linoleic Acid Reduces Body Weight and Fat in <i>Snord116<sup>m+/p−</sup></i> and <i>Snord116<sup>m−/p−</sup></i> Mouse Models of Prader–Willi Syndrome

  • Brittney Knott,
  • Matthew A. Kocher,
  • Henry A. Paz,
  • Shelby E. Hamm,
  • William Fink,
  • Jordan Mason,
  • Robert W. Grange,
  • Umesh D. Wankhade,
  • Deborah J. Good

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14040860
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. 860

Abstract

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Prader–Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a human genetic condition that affects up to 1 in 10,000 live births. Affected infants present with hypotonia and developmental delay. Hyperphagia and increasing body weight follow unless drastic calorie restriction is initiated. Recently, our laboratory showed that one of the genes in the deleted locus causative for PWS, Snord116, maintains increased expression of hypothalamic Nhlh2, a basic helix–loop–helix transcription factor. We have previously also shown that obese mice with a deletion of Nhlh2 respond to a conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) diet with weight and fat loss. In this study, we investigated whether mice with a paternal deletion of Snord116 (Snord116m+/p−) would respond similarly. We found that while Snord116m+/p− mice and mice with a deletion of both Snord116 alleles were not significantly obese on a high-fat diet, they did lose body weight and fat on a high-fat/CLA diet, suggesting that the genotype did not interfere with CLA actions. There were no changes in food intake or metabolic rate, and only moderate differences in exercise performance. RNA-seq and microbiome analyses identified hypothalamic mRNAs, and differentially populated gut bacteria, that support future mechanistic analyses. CLA may be useful as a food additive to reduce obesity in humans with PWS.

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