Affiliation:
1. School of Medical Sciences UNSW Sydney Sydney NSW 2052 Australia
2. School of Life Sciences University of Technology Ultimo NSW 2007 Australia
3. APC Microbiome University of Cork Cork T12 K8AF Ireland
4. School of Psychology UNSW Sydney Sydney NSW 2052 Australia
Abstract
ScopeThe effects of diet cycling on cognition and fecal microbiota are not well understood.Method and ResultsAdult male Sprague‐Dawley rats were cycled between a high‐fat, high‐sugar “cafeteria” diet (Caf) and regular chow. The impairment in place recognition memory produced by 16 days of Caf diet was reduced by switching to chow for 11 but not 4 days. Next, rats received 16 days of Caf diet in 2, 4, 8, or 16‐day cycles, each separated by 4‐day chow cycles. Place recognition memory declined from baseline in all groups and was impaired in the 16‐ versus 2‐day group. Finally, rats received 24 days of Caf diet continuously or in 3‐day cycles separated by 2‐ or 4‐day chow cycles. Any Caf diet access impaired cognition and increased adiposity relative to controls, without altering hippocampal gene expression. Place recognition and adiposity were the strongest predictors of global microbiota composition. Overall, diets with higher Caf > chow ratios produced greater spatial memory impairments and larger shifts in gut microbiota species richness and beta diversity.ConclusionResults suggest that diet‐induced cognitive deficits worsen in proportion to unhealthy diet exposure, and that shifting to a healthy chow for at least a week is required for recovery under the conditions tested here.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Subject
Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
5 articles.
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