Sex and genetic specific effects on behavioral, but not metabolic, responses to a high fat diet in heterogeneous stock rats

Aaron Deal, A. Thurman, Osborne Seshie, Alexandria M. Szalanczy, Angela Beeson, Mackenzie Cockerham, Ellen L Risemberg, Anne Lenzo, N. Ozimek, Carl Langefeld, W. Valdar, L. S. Solberg Woods
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Abstract

Obesity is a growing epidemic associated with a range of comorbidities, including anxiety and depression. Genetics and environmental factors such as diet contribute to both adiposity and anxiety/depression. Heterogeneous stock (HS) rats are an outbred colony and useful for genetic mapping of complex traits. We have previously shown that HS male rats exhibit worsened metabolic and behavioral health in response to high fat diet (HFD). This study aims to determine if females have similar response to diet and if response to diet interacts with genetic background. We measured multiple metabolic (body weight, fat pad weight, glucose tolerance, fasting glucose and insulin) and behavioral (elevated plus maze, open field test, and forced swim test) outcomes in a large cohort of male and female rats on either HFD or low fat diet (LFD). We estimated overall heritability as well as heritability of response to diet for each outcome. Both sexes showed worsened metabolic measures when fed HFD compared to LFD. In contrast, only males exhibited altered behavioral responses to HFD relative to LFD, with no effect in females. Most metabolic and behavioral measures showed overall heritability in both sexes. In contrast, although there was some evidence for gene by diet (GxD) interactions for behavioral measures in males, GxD interactions were generally not found for the metabolic measures. These data demonstrate an important role of diet, sex and genetics in metabolic and behavioral phenotypes in HS rats, with a potential role of gene by diet interactions for behavioral outcomes only in males.
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性别和基因对异种饲养大鼠对高脂肪饮食的行为而非代谢反应的特定影响
肥胖是一种日益流行的流行病,与一系列合并症有关,包括焦虑和抑郁。遗传和环境因素(如饮食)会导致肥胖和焦虑/抑郁。异种种群(HS)大鼠是一种近交群体,可用于复杂性状的遗传定位。我们之前的研究表明,HS雄性大鼠在高脂肪饮食(HFD)下表现出代谢和行为健康恶化。这项研究旨在确定女性是否对饮食有类似的反应,以及对饮食的反应是否与遗传背景相互作用。我们测量了高脂饮食或低脂饮食(LFD)的一大群雄性和雌性大鼠的多种代谢(体重、脂肪垫重量、葡萄糖耐量、空腹血糖和胰岛素)和行为(升高加迷宫、露天试验和强迫游泳试验)结果。我们估计了每个结果的总体遗传率以及对饮食反应的遗传率。与食用低脂食物相比,食用高脂食物时,男女的代谢指标都有所恶化。相比之下,只有男性对HFD表现出相对于LFD的行为反应改变,而对女性没有影响。大多数代谢和行为测量显示两性的总体遗传性。相比之下,虽然有一些证据表明基因与饮食(GxD)在雄性行为测量中相互作用,但在代谢测量中通常没有发现GxD相互作用。这些数据表明,饮食、性别和遗传在HS大鼠的代谢和行为表型中起着重要作用,而基因通过饮食相互作用仅对雄性大鼠的行为结果起潜在作用。
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