4.7 Article

Effects of Diet Quality and Psychosocial Stress on the Metabolic Profiles of Mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages 1857-1867

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00859

Keywords

chronic social stress; diet; metabolome; mouse; plasma; peripheral tissue

Funding

  1. Ibaraki University
  2. Research Project on the Development of Agricultural Products and Foods with Health-promoting benefits (NARO) (The MAFF, Japan)
  3. Council for Science, Technology and Innovation (CSTI)

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There has been an increasing interest in relationship between stress and diet. To address this relationship, we evaluated an animal model of depression: male C57BL/6J mice subjected to subchronic mild social defeat stress (sCSDS) for 10 consecutive days using male ICR mice under two different calorie-adjusted diets conditions-nonpurified (MF) and semi purified (AIN) diets made from natural and chemical ingredients mainly, respectively. Our previous study indicates that diet quality and purity affect stress susceptibility in sCSDS mice. We therefore hypothesized that there are some key peripheral metabolites to change stress-susceptible behavior. GC-MS metabolomics of plasma, liver, and cecal content were performed on four test groups: sCSDS + AIN diet (n = 7), sCSDS + MF diet (n = 6), control (no sCSDS) + AIN diet (n = 8), and control + MF diet (n = 8). Metabolome analyses revealed that the number of metabolites changed by food was larger than the number changed by stress in all tissues. Enrichment analysis of the liver stress-susceptible mice show increased glycolysis-related substrates in the liver. We found metabolites that were affected by stress (e.g., plasma and liver 4-hydroxyproline and plasma beta-alanine are higher in sCSDS than in control) and a stress x food interaction (e.g., plasma GABA is lower in sCSDS + AIN than in sCSDS + MF). Because functional compounds were altered by both stress and food, diet may be able to attenuate various stress-induced symptoms by changing metabolites in peripheral tissues.

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