Sucrose overconsumption impairs feeding circuit dynamics and promotes palatable food intake

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Abstract

Rapid gut-brain communication is critical to maintain energy balance and is disrupted in diet-induced obesity through mechanisms that remain obscure. Specifically, the role of carbohydrate overconsumption in the regulation of interoceptive circuits has been minimally examinedin vivo. Here we report that an obesogenic high-sucrose diet (HSD) selectively blunts silencing of hunger-promoting AgRP neurons following intragastric delivery of glucose, whereas we previously showed that overconsumption of a high-fat diet (HFD) selectively attenuates lipid-induced neural silencing. By contrast, both HSD and HFD reversibly dampen rapid AgRP neuron sensory inhibition following chow presentation and promote intake of more palatable foods. Our findings reveal that excess sugar and fat pathologically modulate feeding circuit activity in both macronutrient-dependent and -independent ways, and thus may additively exacerbate obesity.

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