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Chronic rhein treatment improves recognition memory in high-fat diet-induced obese male mice

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posted on 2024-11-16, 07:11 authored by Sen Wang, Xu-Feng HuangXu-Feng Huang, Peng Zhang, Hongqin Wang, Qingsheng Zhang, Shijia Yu, Yinghua YuYinghua Yu
High-fat (HF) diet modulates gut microbiota and increases plasma concentration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) which is associated with obesity and its related low-grade inflammation and cognitive decline. Rhein is the main ingredient of the rhubarb plant which has been used as an anti-inflammatory agent for several millennia. However, the potential effects of rhein against HF diet-induced obesity and its associated alteration of gut microbiota, inflammation and cognitive decline have not been studied. In this study, C57BL/6J male mice were fed an HF diet for 8 weeks to induce obesity, and then treated with oral rhein (120 mg/kg body weight/day in HF diet) for a further 6 weeks. Chronic rhein treatment prevented the HF diet-induced recognition memory impairment assessed by the novel object recognition test, neuroinflammation and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) deficits in the perirhinal cortex. Furthermore, rhein inhibited the HF diet-induced increased plasma LPS level and the proinflammatory macrophage accumulation in the colon and alteration of microbiota, including decreasing Bacteroides-Prevotella spp. and Desulfovibrios spp. DNA and increasing Bifidobacterium spp. and Lactobacillus spp. DNA. Moreover, rhein also reduced body weight and improved glucose tolerance in HF diet-induced obese mice. In conclusion, rhein improved recognition memory and prevented obesity in mice on a chronic HF diet. These beneficial effects occur via the modulation of microbiota, hypoendotoxinemia, inhibition of macrophage accumulation, anti-neuroinflammation and the improvement of BDNF expression. Therefore, supplementation with rhein-enriched food or herbal medicine could be beneficial as a preventive strategy for chronic HF diet-induced cognitive decline, microbiota alteration and neuroinflammation.

Funding

Estimation of Performance Measures and Capacity Assessment in Multivariate Processes (Researcher Mineiro Program - PPM XII)

Coordenação de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

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Citation

Wang, S., Huang, X., Zhang, P., Wang, H., Zhang, Q., Yu, S. & Yu, Y. (2016). Chronic rhein treatment improves recognition memory in high-fat diet-induced obese male mice. Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 36 42-50.

Journal title

Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry

Volume

36

Pagination

42-50

Language

English

RIS ID

109312

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