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Dietary-induced obesity disrupts trace fear conditioning and decreases hippocampal reelin expression

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:50 authored by Amy Reichelt, Jayanthi Maniama, R. Westbrook, Margaret Morris
Both obesity and over-consumption of palatable high fat/high sugar "cafeteria" diets in rats has been shown to induce cognitive deficits in executive function, attention and spatial memory. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a diet that supplemented standard lab chow with a range of palatable foods eaten by people for 8. weeks, or regular lab chow. Memory was assessed using a trace fear conditioning procedure, whereby a conditioned stimulus (CS) is presented for 10. s and then 30. s after its termination a foot shock (US) is delivered. We assessed freezing to the CS (flashing light) in a neutral context, and freezing in the context associated with footshock. A dissociation was observed between levels of freezing in the context and to the CS associated with footshock. Cafeteria diet fed rats froze less than control chow fed rats in the context associated with footshock (P< 0.01), indicating that encoding of a hippocampus-dependent context representation was impaired in these rats. Conversely, cafeteria diet fed rats froze more (P< 0.05) to the CS than chow fed rats, suggesting that when hippocampal function was compromised the cue was the best predictor of footshock, as contextual information was not encoded.Dorsal hippocampal mRNA expression of inflammatory and neuroplasticity markers was analysed at the end of the experiment, 10. weeks of diet. Of these, mRNA expression of reelin, which is known to be important in long term potentiation and neuronal plasticity, was significantly reduced in cafeteria diet fed rats (P = 0.003). This implicates reductions in hippocampal plasticity in the contextual fear memory deficits seen in the cafeteria diet fed rats.

Funding

Does obesity alter the associations to food related cues, contexts and responses? Obesity is increasing dramatically in the developed world

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Brain, Behavior, and Immunity

Volume

43

Start page

68

End page

75

Total pages

8

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Elsevier Inc.

Former Identifier

2006068738

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-12-14

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