Removal of a high-fat diet, but not voluntary exercise, reverses obesity and diabetic-like symptoms in male C57BL/6J mice

OBJECTIVE Both the consumption of high-fat diets and exercise are known to produce alterations in metabolism and behavior. This study focuses on the effects of a change to a low-fat diet from a high-fat diet and voluntary exercise on obesity, type-2 diabetic-like symptoms, and locomotor behavior in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hormones (Athens, Greece) Greece), 2017-01, Vol.16 (1), p.62-74
Hauptverfasser: Hatzidis, Aikaterini, Hicks, Jasmin A., Gelineau, Rachel R., Arruda, Nicole L., De Pina, Isabella Monteiro, O’Connell, Karyn E., Seggio, Joseph A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVE Both the consumption of high-fat diets and exercise are known to produce alterations in metabolism and behavior. This study focuses on the effects of a change to a low-fat diet from a high-fat diet and voluntary exercise on obesity, type-2 diabetic-like symptoms, and locomotor behavior in male C57BL/6J mice. DESIGN Mice were initially given either a high-fat diet or regular chow, along with a cage with a running-wheel to mimic exercise, or one without, to determine to what extend exercise affects these symptoms. Then half of the mice given a high-fat diet were switched to regular chow to ascertain if the switch in diet would improve type-2 diabetic-like and obesity symptoms. RESULTS Wheel-running alone produced an improvement in insulin in mice continuously fed a high-fat diet ( p =0.006), but running-wheels did not produce any further improvements in mice with regular chow replacement ( p =0.999) or in controls ( p =0.996). Replacement of a high-fat diet with regular chow led to physiological improvements in insulin ( p =0.012) and leptin ( p
ISSN:1109-3099
2520-8721
DOI:10.14310/horm.2002.1720