Author:
Hayes Anna M.R.,Tsan Linda,Kao Alicia E.,Schwartz Grace M.,Décarie-Spain Léa,Lauer Logan Tierno,Klug Molly E.,Schier Lindsey A.,Kanoski Scott E.
Abstract
AbstractChildren frequently consume beverages sweetened with either sugars (sugar-sweetened beverages; SSB) or low-calorie sweeteners (LCS). Here we evaluated the effects of habitual early life consumption of either SSB or LCS on energy balance later during adulthood. Male and female rats were provided with chow, water, and a solution containing either SSB (sucrose), LCS [acesulfame potassium (ACE-K) or stevia], or control (no solution) during the juvenile and adolescent periods (postnatal days 26-70). SSB or LCS consumption was voluntary and restricted within federal recommended daily limits. When subsequently maintained on a cafeteria-style junk food diet (CAF; various high-fat, high-sugar foods) during adulthood, ACE-K-exposed rats demonstrated reduced caloric consumption vs. controls, which contributed to lower body weights in female but not male ACE-K rats. These discrepant intake and body weight effects in male ACE-K rats are likely based on reduced gene expression of thermogenic indicators (UCP1, BMP8B) in brown adipose tissue. Female stevia-exposed rats did not differ from controls in caloric intake or body weight, yet they consumed more SSB during adult CAF exposure. No SSB-exposed rats, neither male nor female, differed from controls in adult total caloric consumption or body weight measures. Collective results reveal that early life LCS consumption alters sugar preference, body weight, and gene expression for markers of thermogenesis during adulthood, with both sex- and sweetener-dependent effects.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory