Obesity and dietary fat influence dopamine neurotransmission: exploring the convergence of metabolic state, physiological stress, and inflammation on dopaminergic control of food intake.

IF 5.1 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Nutrition Research Reviews Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Epub Date: 2021-06-28 DOI:10.1017/S0954422421000196
Conner W Wallace, Steve C Fordahl
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

The aim of this review is to explore how metabolic changes induced by diets high in saturated fat (HFD) affect nucleus accumbens (NAc) dopamine neurotransmission and food intake, and to explore how stress and inflammation influence this process. Recent evidence linked diet-induced obesity and HFD with reduced dopamine release and reuptake. Altered dopamine neurotransmission could disrupt satiety circuits between NAc dopamine terminals and projections to the hypothalamus. The NAc directs learning and motivated behaviours based on homeostatic needs and psychological states. Therefore, impaired dopaminergic responses to palatable food could contribute to weight gain by disrupting responses to food cues or stress, which impacts type and quantity of food consumed. Specifically, saturated fat promotes neuronal resistance to anorectic hormones and activation of immune cells that release proinflammatory cytokines. Insulin has been shown to regulate dopamine neurotransmission by enhancing satiety, but less is known about effects of diet-induced stress. Therefore, changes to dopamine signalling due to HFD warrant further examination to characterise crosstalk of cytokines with endocrine and neurotransmitter signals. A HFD promotes a proinflammatory environment that may disrupt neuronal endocrine function and dopamine signalling that could be exacerbated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal and κ-opioid receptor stress systems. Together, these adaptive changes may dysregulate eating by changing NAc dopamine during hedonic versus homeostatic food intake. This could drive palatable food cravings during energy restriction and hinder weight loss. Understanding links between HFD and dopamine neurotransmission will inform treatment strategies for diet-induced obesity and identify molecular candidates for targeted therapeutics.

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肥胖和膳食脂肪影响多巴胺神经传递:探索代谢状态、生理应激和炎症对食物摄入多巴胺能控制的趋同。
本综述旨在探讨高饱和脂肪饮食(HFD)诱导的代谢变化如何影响伏隔核(NAc)多巴胺神经传递和食物摄入,以及应激和炎症如何影响这一过程。最近的证据表明饮食引起的肥胖和HFD与多巴胺释放和再摄取减少有关。多巴胺神经传递的改变可以破坏NAc多巴胺末端和下丘脑投射之间的饱腹感回路。NAc根据稳态需求和心理状态指导学习和动机行为。因此,对美味食物的多巴胺能反应受损可能会通过破坏对食物线索或压力的反应而导致体重增加,从而影响所消耗食物的类型和数量。具体来说,饱和脂肪促进神经元抵抗厌食激素和激活释放促炎细胞因子的免疫细胞。胰岛素已被证明通过增强饱腹感来调节多巴胺神经传递,但对饮食引起的压力的影响知之甚少。因此,HFD引起的多巴胺信号的变化需要进一步研究细胞因子与内分泌和神经递质信号的串扰。HFD促进促炎环境,可能破坏神经元内分泌功能和多巴胺信号,下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺和κ-阿片受体应激系统可能加剧。综上所述,这些适应性变化可能通过改变饮食中的NAc多巴胺来调节饮食。这可能会在能量限制期间引发对美味食物的渴望,阻碍减肥。了解HFD和多巴胺神经传递之间的联系将为饮食性肥胖的治疗策略提供信息,并确定靶向治疗的分子候选物。
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来源期刊
Nutrition Research Reviews
Nutrition Research Reviews 医学-营养学
CiteScore
16.10
自引率
1.80%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: Nutrition Research Reviews offers a comprehensive overview of nutritional science today. By distilling the latest research and linking it to established practice, the journal consistently delivers the widest range of in-depth articles in the field of nutritional science. It presents up-to-date, critical reviews of key topics in nutrition science advancing new concepts and hypotheses that encourage the exchange of fundamental ideas on nutritional well-being in both humans and animals.
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