High-fat diet induces neuroinflammation and reduces the serotonergic response to escitalopram in the hippocampus of obese rats

•Diet-induced obesity (DIO) elicits a depressive-like phenotype.•DIO rats exhibit reduced hippocampal synaptic responses to escitalopram.•Hippocampal SERT expression and activity is increased in DIO rats.•Cytokines are increased in the hippocampus but not raphe nucleus of DIO rats.•Results provide p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain, behavior, and immunity behavior, and immunity, 2021-08, Vol.96, p.63-72
Hauptverfasser: Hersey, Melinda, Woodruff, Jennifer L., Maxwell, Nicholas, Sadek, Alia T., Bykalo, Maria K., Bain, Ian, Grillo, Claudia A., Piroli, Gerardo G., Hashemi, Parastoo, Reagan, Lawrence P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Diet-induced obesity (DIO) elicits a depressive-like phenotype.•DIO rats exhibit reduced hippocampal synaptic responses to escitalopram.•Hippocampal SERT expression and activity is increased in DIO rats.•Cytokines are increased in the hippocampus but not raphe nucleus of DIO rats.•Results provide potential mechanism for reduced SSRI responsiveness in obesity. Clinical studies indicate that obese individuals have an increased risk of developing co-morbid depressive illness and that these patients have reduced responses to antidepressant therapy, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Obesity, a condition of chronic mild inflammation including obesity-induced neuroinflammation, is proposed to contribute to decreases in synaptic concentrations of neurotransmitters like serotonin (5HT) by decreasing 5HT synthesis in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) and/or affecting 5HT reuptake in DRN target regions like the hippocampus. In view of these observations, the goal of the current study was to examine inflammatory markers and serotonergic dynamics in co-morbid obesity and depression. Biochemical and behavioral assays revealed that high-fat diet produced an obesity and depressive-like phenotype in one cohort of rats and that these changes were marked by increases in key pro-inflammatory cytokines in the hippocampus. In real time using fast scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV), we observed no changes in basal levels of hippocampal 5HT; however responses to escitalopram were significantly impaired in the hippocampus of obese rats compared to diet resistant rats and control rats. Further studies revealed that these neurochemical observations could be explained by increases in serotonin transporter (SERT) expression in the hippocampus driven by elevated neuroinflammation. Collectively, these results demonstrate that obesity-induced increases in neuroinflammation adversely affect SERT expression in the hippocampus of obese rats, thereby providing a potential synaptic mechanism for reduced SSRI responsiveness in obese subjects with co-morbid depressive illness.
ISSN:0889-1591
1090-2139
DOI:10.1016/j.bbi.2021.05.010