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Butyrate ameliorates quinolinic acid-induced cognitive decline in obesity models

Authors :
Ge, Xing
Zheng, Mingxuan
Hu, Minmin
Fang, Xiaoli
Geng, Deqin
Liu, Sha
Wang, Li
Zhang, Jun
Guan, Li
Zheng, Peng
Xie, Yuanyi
Pan, Wei
Zhou, Menglu
Zhou, Limian
Tang, Renxian
Zheng, Kuiyang
Yu, Yinghua
Huang, Xu-Feng
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. February 15, 2023, Vol. 133 Issue 4
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Obesity is a risk factor for neurodegenerative disease associated with cognitive dysfunction, including Alzheimer's disease. Low-grade inflammation is common in obesity, but the mechanism between inflammation and cognitive impairment in obesity is unclear. Accumulative evidence shows that quinolinic acid (QA), a neuroinflammatory neurotoxin, is involved in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative processes. We investigated the role of QA in obesity-induced cognitive impairment and the beneficial effect of butyrate in counteracting impairments of cognition, neural morphology, and signaling. We show that in human obesity, there was a negative relationship between serum QA levels and cognitive function and decreased cortical gray matter. Diet-induced obese mice had increased QA levels in the cortex associated with cognitive impairment. At single-cell resolution, we confirmed that QA impaired neurons, altered the dendritic spine's intracellular signal, and reduced brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels. Using Caenorhabditis elegans models, QA induced dopaminergic and glutamatergic neuron lesions. Importantly, the gut microbiota metabolite butyrate was able to counteract those alterations, including cognitive impairment, neuronal spine loss, and BDNF reduction in both in vivo and in vitro studies. Finally, we show that butyrate prevented QA-induced BDNF reductions by epigenetic enhancement of H3K18ac at BDNF promoters. These findings suggest that increased QA is associated with cognitive decline in obesity and that butyrate alleviates neurodegeneration.<br />Introduction Obesity is a growing health concern that has increased in prevalence worldwide in the past 50 years, reaching pandemic levels (1). Obesity is also associated with cognitive dysfunction and [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
133
Issue :
4
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.738979368
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI154612