Different Effects of High-Fat/High-Sucrose and High-Fructose Diets on Advanced Glycation End-Product Accumulation and on Mitochondrial Involvement in Heart and Skeletal Muscle in Mice

Author:

Aimaretti Eleonora1ORCID,Chimienti Guglielmina2ORCID,Rubeo Chiara1ORCID,Di Lorenzo Rosa2ORCID,Trisolini Lucia3,Dal Bello Federica4ORCID,Moradi Atefeh1,Collino Massimo5ORCID,Lezza Angela Maria Serena2ORCID,Aragno Manuela1ORCID,Pesce Vito2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Experimental Medicine & Clinical Pathology, Department of Clinical and Biological Science, University of Turin, 10125 Turin, Italy

2. Department of Biosciences Biotechnologies and Environment, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Via Orabona 4, 70125 Bari, Italy

3. Institute of Biomembranes, Bioenergetics and Molecular Biotechnologies, National Research Council, CNR, 70125 Bari, Italy

4. Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Health Sciences, University of Turin, 10125 Turin, Italy

5. Department of Neuroscience “Rita Levi Montalcini”, University of Turin, 10125 Turin, Italy

Abstract

Diets with an elevated content of fat, sucrose, or fructose are recognized models of diet-induced metabolic alterations, since they induce metabolic derangements, oxidative stress, and chronic low-grade inflammation associated with local and systemic accumulation of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). This study used four-week-old C57BL/6 male mice, randomly assigned to three experimental dietary regimens: standard diet (SD), high-fat high-sucrose diet (HFHS), or high fructose diet (HFr), administered for 12 weeks. Plasma, heart, and tibialis anterior (TA) skeletal muscle were assayed for markers of metabolic conditions, inflammation, presence of AGEs, and mitochondrial involvement. The HFHS diet induced a tissue-specific differential response featuring (1) a remarkable adaptation of the heart to HFHS-induced heavy oxidative stress, demonstrated by an increased presence of AGEs and reduced mitochondrial biogenesis, and efficaciously counteracted by a conspicuous increase in mitochondrial fission and PRXIII expression; (2) the absence of TA adaptation to HFHS, revealed by a heavy reduction in mitochondrial biogenesis, not counteracted by an increase in fission and PRXIII expression. HFr-induced mild oxidative stress elicited tissue-specific responses, featuring (1) a decrease in mitochondrial biogenesis in the heart, likely counteracted by a tendency for increased fission and (2) a mild reduction in mitochondrial biogenesis in TA, likely counteracted by a tendency for increased fusion, showing the adaptability of both tissues to the diet.

Funder

The Università degli Studi di Torino

Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies

The University of Bari Aldo Moro

MIUR-FFABR 2018

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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