Chronic High Fat Diet Consumption Impairs Metabolic Health of Male Mice

Inflamm Cell Signal. 2014;1(6):e561. doi: 10.14800/ics.561.

Abstract

We show that chronic high fat diet (HFD) feeding affects the hypothalamus of male but not female mice. In our study we demonstrate that palmitic acid and sphingolipids accumulate in the central nervous system of HFD-fed males. Additionally, we show that HFD-feeding reduces proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator-1 alpha (PGC-1α) thus reducing estrogen receptor α (ERα) and driving hypothalamic inflammation in male but not female mice. Hypothalamic inflammation correlates with markers of metabolic dysregulation as indicated by dysregulation in glucose intolerance and myocardial function. Lastly, we demonstrate that there are blockages in mitophagy and lipophagy in hypothalamic tissues in males. Our data suggest there is a sexually dimorphic response to chronic HDF exposure, females; despite gaining the same amount of body weight following HFD-feeding, appear to be protected from the adverse metabolic effects of the HFD.

Keywords: 17-β estradiol; Autophagy; Estrogen Receptor α; Lipophagy; Mitophagy; Palmitic Acid; Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor-Gamma Coactivator-1α.