Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/40187
Tipo: Artigo de Periódico
Título: Effect of hypoproteic and high-fat diets on hippocampal blood-brain barrier permeability and oxidative stress
Autor(es): Aquino, Cristhyane Costa de
Leitão, Ricardo A.
Alves, Luis Antonio de Oliveira
Coelho-Santos, Vanessa
Guerrant, Richard L.
Ribeiro, Carlos F.
Malva, João O.
Silva, Ana P.
Oriá, Reinaldo B.
Palavras-chave: Dieta;Diet;Oxidative Stress;Estresse Oxidativo
Data do documento: Jan-2019
Instituição/Editor/Publicador: Frontiers in Nutrition
Citação: AQUINO, Cristhyane Costa de et al. Effect of hypoproteic and high-fat diets on hippocampal blood-brain barrier permeability and oxidative stress. Frontiers in Nutrition, v. 5, n. 131, p. 1-10, jan. 2019.
Abstract: Worldwide, millions of people are exposed to dietary imbalance that impacts in health and quality of life. In developing countries, like in Brazil, in poor settings, dietary habits, traditionally hypoproteic, are changing rapidly to western-type high-fat foods. These rapidly changing dietary habits are imposing new challenges to human health and there are many questions in the field that remain to be answered. Accordingly, we currently do not know if chronic consumption of hypoproteic (regional basic diet, RBD) or high-fat diets (HFD) may impact the brain physiology, contributing to blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction and neuroinflammatory events. To address this issue, mice were challenged by breastfeeding from dams receiving standard, RBD or HFD from suckling day 10 until weaning. Immediately after weaning, mice continued under the same diets until post-natal day 52. Herein, we show that both RBD and HFD cause not only a peripheral but also a consistent central neuroinflammatory response, characterized by an increased production of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Additionally, BBB hyperpermeability, accounted by an increase in hippocampal albumin content, a decrease in claudin-5 protein levels and collagen IV immunostaining, was also observed together with an upregulation of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1). Interestingly, we also identified a significant astrogliosis, manifested by upregulation of GFAP and S100b levels and an intensification of arbor complexity of these glial cells. In sum, our data show that dietary imbalance, related with hypoproteic or high-fat content, impairs BBB properties potentially favoring the transmigration of peripheral immune cells and induces both a peripheral and central neuroinflammatory status. Noteworthy, neuroinflammatory events in the hippocampus may cause neuronal malfunction leading to cognitive deficits and long-term persistence of this phenomenon may contribute to age-related neurodegenerative diseases.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/40187
ISSN: 2296-861X
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