Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.

The beneficial effects of bioidentical ovarian steroid hormone therapy (HT) during the perimenopause are gaining recognition. However, the positive effects of estrogen (E) plus or minus progesterone (P) administration to ovariectomized (Ovx) lab animals were recognized in multiple systems for years...

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Main Authors: Cynthia L Bethea, Kevin Mueller, Arubala P Reddy, Steven G Kohama, Henryk F Urbanski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5476244?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e348bc0e92e444c692702bb0f15b2cfa2020-11-24T21:49:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01126e017878810.1371/journal.pone.0178788Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.Cynthia L BetheaKevin MuellerArubala P ReddySteven G KohamaHenryk F UrbanskiThe beneficial effects of bioidentical ovarian steroid hormone therapy (HT) during the perimenopause are gaining recognition. However, the positive effects of estrogen (E) plus or minus progesterone (P) administration to ovariectomized (Ovx) lab animals were recognized in multiple systems for years before clinical trials could adequately duplicate the results. Moreover, very large numbers of women are often needed to find statistically significant results in clinical trials of HT; and there are still opposing results being published, especially in neural and cardiovascular systems. One of the obvious differences between human and animal studies is diet. Laboratory animals are fed a diet that is low in fat and refined sugar, but high in micronutrients. In the US, a large portion of the population eats what is known as a "western style diet" or WSD that provides calories from 36% fat, 44% carbohydrates (includes 18.5% sugars) and 18% protein. Unfortunately, obesity and diabetes have reached epidemic proportions and the percentage of obese women in clinical trials may be overlooked. We questioned whether WSD and obesity could decrease the positive neural effects of estradiol (E) in the serotonin system of old macaques that were surgically menopausal. Old ovo-hysterectomized female monkeys were fed WSD for 2.5 years, and treated with placebo, Immediate E (ImE) or Delayed E (DE). Compared to old Ovx macaques on primate chow and treated with placebo or E, the WSD-fed monkeys exhibited greater individual variance and blunted responses to E-treatment in the expression of genes related to serotonin neurotransmission, CRH components in the midbrain, synapse assembly, DNA repair, protein folding, ubiquitylation, transport and neurodegeneration. For many of the genes examined, transcript abundance was lower in WSD-fed than chow-fed monkeys. In summary, an obesogenic diet for 2.5 years in old surgically menopausal macaques blunted or increased variability in E-induced gene expression in the dorsal raphe. These results suggest that with regard to function and viability in the dorsal raphe, HT may not be as beneficial for obese women as normal weight women.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5476244?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cynthia L Bethea
Kevin Mueller
Arubala P Reddy
Steven G Kohama
Henryk F Urbanski
spellingShingle Cynthia L Bethea
Kevin Mueller
Arubala P Reddy
Steven G Kohama
Henryk F Urbanski
Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Cynthia L Bethea
Kevin Mueller
Arubala P Reddy
Steven G Kohama
Henryk F Urbanski
author_sort Cynthia L Bethea
title Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
title_short Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
title_full Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
title_fullStr Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
title_full_unstemmed Effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
title_sort effects of obesogenic diet and estradiol on dorsal raphe gene expression in old female macaques.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The beneficial effects of bioidentical ovarian steroid hormone therapy (HT) during the perimenopause are gaining recognition. However, the positive effects of estrogen (E) plus or minus progesterone (P) administration to ovariectomized (Ovx) lab animals were recognized in multiple systems for years before clinical trials could adequately duplicate the results. Moreover, very large numbers of women are often needed to find statistically significant results in clinical trials of HT; and there are still opposing results being published, especially in neural and cardiovascular systems. One of the obvious differences between human and animal studies is diet. Laboratory animals are fed a diet that is low in fat and refined sugar, but high in micronutrients. In the US, a large portion of the population eats what is known as a "western style diet" or WSD that provides calories from 36% fat, 44% carbohydrates (includes 18.5% sugars) and 18% protein. Unfortunately, obesity and diabetes have reached epidemic proportions and the percentage of obese women in clinical trials may be overlooked. We questioned whether WSD and obesity could decrease the positive neural effects of estradiol (E) in the serotonin system of old macaques that were surgically menopausal. Old ovo-hysterectomized female monkeys were fed WSD for 2.5 years, and treated with placebo, Immediate E (ImE) or Delayed E (DE). Compared to old Ovx macaques on primate chow and treated with placebo or E, the WSD-fed monkeys exhibited greater individual variance and blunted responses to E-treatment in the expression of genes related to serotonin neurotransmission, CRH components in the midbrain, synapse assembly, DNA repair, protein folding, ubiquitylation, transport and neurodegeneration. For many of the genes examined, transcript abundance was lower in WSD-fed than chow-fed monkeys. In summary, an obesogenic diet for 2.5 years in old surgically menopausal macaques blunted or increased variability in E-induced gene expression in the dorsal raphe. These results suggest that with regard to function and viability in the dorsal raphe, HT may not be as beneficial for obese women as normal weight women.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5476244?pdf=render
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