Current Issues in Molecular Biology (Dec 2021)

High Caloric Diet Induces Memory Impairment and Disrupts Synaptic Plasticity in Aged Rats

  • Sara L. Paulo,
  • Catarina Miranda-Lourenço,
  • Rita F. Belo,
  • Rui S. Rodrigues,
  • João Fonseca-Gomes,
  • Sara R. Tanqueiro,
  • Vera Geraldes,
  • Isabel Rocha,
  • Ana M. Sebastião,
  • Sara Xapelli,
  • Maria J. Diógenes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb43030162
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 3
pp. 2305 – 2319

Abstract

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The increasing consumption of sugar and fat seen over the last decades and the consequent overweight and obesity, were recently linked with a deleterious effect on cognition and synaptic function. A major question, which remains to be clarified, is whether obesity in the elderly is an additional risk factor for cognitive impairment. We aimed at unravelling the impact of a chronic high caloric diet (HCD) on memory performance and synaptic plasticity in aged rats. Male rats were kept on an HCD or a standard diet (control) from 1 to 24 months of age. The results showed that under an HCD, aged rats were obese and displayed significant long-term recognition memory impairment when compared to age-matched controls. Ex vivo synaptic plasticity recorded from hippocampal slices from HCD-fed aged rats revealed a reduction in the magnitude of long-term potentiation, accompanied by a decrease in the levels of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor receptors TrkB full-length (TrkB-FL). No alterations in neurogenesis were observed, as quantified by the density of immature doublecortin-positive neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus. This study highlights that obesity induced by a chronic HCD exacerbates age-associated cognitive decline, likely due to impaired synaptic plasticity, which might be associated with deficits in TrkB-FL signaling.

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