Influence of Exercise and Genistein to Mitigate the Deleterious Effects of High-Fat High-Sugar Diet on Alzheimer’s Disease-Related Markers in Male Mice

Author:

Shah Juhi1,Orosz Tyler1ORCID,Singh Avneet1,Laxma Savan Parameshwar1,Gross Rachel E.1ORCID,Smith Nicholas1,Vroegop Spencer1,Sudler Sydney1,Porter James T.2ORCID,Colon Maria2,Jun Lauren3ORCID,Babu Jeganathan R.3,Shim Minsub4,Broderick Thomas L.5,Al-Nakkash Layla15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine, Midwestern University, 19555 N. 59th Avenue, Glendale, AZ 85308, USA

2. Department of Basic Sciences, Ponce Research Institute, Ponce Health Sciences University, Ponce 00732, Puerto Rico

3. Department of Nutritional Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849, USA

4. Department of Biochemistry, College of Graduate Studies, Midwestern University, 19555 N. 59th Avenue, Glendale, AZ 85308, USA

5. Department of Physiology, College of Graduate Studies, Midwestern University, 19555 N. 59th Avenue, Glendale, AZ 85308, USA

Abstract

The prevalence of obesity and related consequences, including insulin resistance and Alzheimer’s-like neuropathology, has increased dramatically. Contributing to this prevalence is the shift in lifestyle preference away from wholesome foods and exercise to the Western-style diet and sedentarism. Despite advances in drug development, a healthy diet and regular exercise remain the most effective approaches to mitigating the unwanted sequelae of diet-induced obesity on brain health. In this study, we used the high-fat high-sugar (HFHS) mouse model of neurodegeneration to examine the effects of exercise training (HFHS+Ex), genistein treatment (HFHS+Gen), and combination treatment (HFHS+Ex+Gen) on proteins relating to neurodegeneration in the brain of male mice. After a period of 12 weeks, as expected, HFHS feeding increased body weight, adipose tissue weight, and systemic plasma inflammation (TNF-α) compared to lean mice fed a standard diet. HFHS feeding also increased protein expression of brain markers of insulin resistance (pGSK-3β, p-IR), apoptosis (caspase 3), early neurofibrillary tangles (CP13), and amyloid-beta precursor (CT20). Compared to HFHS mice, Ex decreased body weight, plasma TNF-α, and expression of pGSK-3β, caspase 3, CP13, amyloid-β precursor (22c11), and ADAM10. Treatment with Gen was equally protective on these markers and decreased the expression of p-IR. Combination treatment with Ex and Gen afforded the greatest overall benefits, and this group exhibited the greatest reduction in body and adipose tissue weight and all brain markers, except for 22c11 and ADAM10, which were decreased compared to mice fed an HFHS diet. In addition, levels of 4G8, which detects protein levels of amyloid-β, were decreased with combination treatment. Our results indicate that exercise training, genistein supplementation, or combination treatment provide varying degrees of neuroprotection from HFHS feeding-induced Alzheimer’s pathology. Future perspectives could include evaluating moderate exercise regimens in combination with dietary supplementation with genistein in humans to determine whether the same benefits translate clinically.

Funder

Midwestern University Intramural funds

Midwestern Arizona Alzheimer’s Consortium

RCMI BRAIN Core

Diabetes Action and Research Education Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

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