4.7 Article

The Divergent Roles of Dietary Saturated and Monounsaturated Fatty Acids on Nerve Function in Murine Models of Obesity

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 39, Issue 19, Pages 3770-3781

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3173-18.2019

Keywords

diabetes; monounsaturated fatty acid; neuropathy; prediabetes; saturated fatty acid; sensory neuron

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) [R24 DK082841, R01 DK107956, F32 1F32DK112642, T32 1T32DK101357]
  2. NIDDK DiaComp Award [DK076169]
  3. Novo Nordisk Foundation Grant [NNF14OC0011633]
  4. Milstein, Nathan, and Rose Research Fund
  5. Michigan Mouse Metabolic Phenotyping Center - NIH Grant U2C
  6. American Diabetes Association
  7. Program for Neurology Research and Discovery
  8. A. Alfred Taubman Medical Research Institute
  9. NIH NIDDK Grant [P60DK020572]

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Neuropathy is the most common complication of prediabetes and diabetes and presents as distal-to-proximal loss of peripheral nerve function in the lower extremities. Neuropathy progression and disease severity in prediabetes and diabetes correlates with dyslipidemia in man and murine models of disease. Dyslipidemia is characterized by elevated levels of circulating saturated fatty acids (SFAs) that associate with the progression of neuropathy. Increased intake of monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA)-rich diets confers metabolic health benefits; however, the impact of fatty acid saturation in neuropathy is unknown. This study examines the differential effect of SFAs andMUFAson the development of neuropathy and the molecular mechanisms underlying the progression of the complication. Male mice Mus musculus fed a high-fat diet rich in SFAs developed robust peripheral neuropathy. This neuropathy was completely reversed by switching the mice from the SFA-rich high-fat diet to a MUFA-rich high-fat diet; nerve conduction velocities and intraepidermal nerve fiber density were restored. A MUFA oleate also prevented the impairment of mitochondrial transport and protected mitochondrial membrane potential in cultured sensory neurons treated with mixtures of oleate and the SFA palmitate. Moreover, oleate also preserved intracellular ATP levels, prevented apoptosis induced by palmitate treatment, and promoted lipid droplet formation in sensory neurons, suggesting that lipid droplets protect sensory neurons from lipotoxicity. Together, these results suggest that MUFAs reverse the progression of neuropathy by protecting mitochondrial function and transport through the formation of intracellular lipid droplets in sensory neurons.

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