Chronic social stress lessens the metabolic effects induced by a high-fat diet

Publication date

2021-04-01

Authors

Jene, Tanja
Ruiz de Azua, Inigo
Hasch, Annika
Klüpfel, Jennifer
Deuster, Julia
Maas, Mario
Nijboer, CoraISNI 0000000419423345
Lutz, Beat
Müller, Marianne B
van der Kooij, Michael A.ORCID 0000-0001-7415-1379

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

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License

taverne

Abstract

Stress has a major impact on the modulation of metabolism, as previously evidenced by hyperglycemia following chronic social defeat (CSD) stress in mice. Although CSD-triggered metabolic dysregulation might predispose to pre-diabetic conditions, insulin sensitivity remained intact, and obesity did not develop, when animals were fed with a standard diet (SD). Here, we investigated whether a nutritional challenge, a high-fat diet (HFD), aggravates the metabolic phenotype and whether there are particularly sensitive time windows for the negative consequences of HFD exposure. Chronically stressed male mice and controls (CTRL) were kept under (i) SD-conditions, (ii) with HFD commencing post-CSD, or (iii) provided with HFD lasting throughout and after CSD. Under SD conditions, stress increased glucose levels early post-CSD. Both HFD regimens increased glucose levels in non-stressed mice but not in stressed mice. Nonetheless, when HFD was provided after CSD, stressed mice did not differ from controls in long-term body weight gain, fat tissue mass and plasma insulin, and leptin levels. In contrast, when HFD was continuously available, stressed mice displayed reduced body weight gain, lowered plasma levels of insulin and leptin, and reduced white adipose tissue weights as compared to their HFD-treated non-stressed controls. Interestingly, stress-induced adrenal hyperplasia and hypercortisolemia were observed in mice treated with SD and with HFD after CSD but not in stressed mice exposed to a continuous HFD treatment. The present work demonstrates that CSD can reduce HFD-induced metabolic dysregulation. Hence, HFD during stress may act beneficially, as comfort food, by decreasing stress-induced metabolic demands.

Keywords

adipose tissue, glucose, high fat diet, metabolism, stress, Taverne, Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Endocrinology

Citation

Jene, T, Ruiz de Azua, I, Hasch, A, Klüpfel, J, Deuster, J, Maas, M, Nijboer, C H, Lutz, B, Müller, M B & van der Kooij, M A 2021, 'Chronic social stress lessens the metabolic effects induced by a high-fat diet', Journal of Endocrinology, vol. 249, no. 1, pp. 19-30. https://doi.org/10.1530/JOE-20-0633