The effects of paternal dietary fat versus sugar on offspring body composition and anxiety-related behavior

•In isocaloric diets, a greater amount of fat increased body fat, while increased dietary sucrose had no significant effect on the body composition of male mice.•Sex-specific outcomes were observed in offspring body composition and behavioral traits, and were found to interact with paternal effects....

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Physiology & behavior 2024-05, Vol.279, p.114533-114533, Article 114533
Hauptverfasser: Freire, Therese, Pulpitel, Tamara, Clark, Ximonie, Mackay, Flora, Raubenheimer, David, Simpson, Stephen J., Solon-Biet, Samantha M., Crean, Angela J.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•In isocaloric diets, a greater amount of fat increased body fat, while increased dietary sucrose had no significant effect on the body composition of male mice.•Sex-specific outcomes were observed in offspring body composition and behavioral traits, and were found to interact with paternal effects.•The nature in which paternal effects influenced offspring depended greatly on the offspring's current environment. Increasing evidence suggests that the pre-conception parental environment has long-term consequences for offspring health and disease susceptibility. Though much of the work in this field concentrates on maternal influences, there is growing understanding that fathers also play a significant role in affecting offspring phenotypes. In this study, we investigate effects of altering the proportion of dietary fats and carbohydrates on paternal and offspring body composition and anxiety-related behavior in C57Bl/6-JArc mice. We show that in an isocaloric context, greater dietary fat increased body fat and reduced anxiety-like behavior of studs, whereas increased dietary sucrose had no significant effect. These dietary effects were not reflected in offspring traits, rather, we found sex-specific effects that differed between offspring body composition and behavioral traits. This finding is consistent with past paternal effect studies, where transgenerational effects have been shown to be more prominent in one sex over the other. Here, male offspring of fathers fed high-fat diets were heavier at 10 weeks of age due to increased lean body mass, whereas paternal diet had no significant effect on female offspring body fat or lean mass. In contrast, paternal dietary sugar appeared to have the strongest effects on male offspring behavior, with male offspring of high-sucrose fathers spending less time in the closed arms of the elevated plus maze. Both high-fat and high-sugar paternal diets were found to reduce anxiety-like behavior of female offspring, although this effect was only evident when offspring were fed a control diet. This study provides new understanding of the ways in which diet can shape the behavior of fathers and their offspring and contribute to the development of dietary guidelines to improve obesity and mental health conditions, such as anxiety.
ISSN:0031-9384
1873-507X
DOI:10.1016/j.physbeh.2024.114533