The impact of housing and high-fructose diet on behavior and cardiovascular response to eucalyptus wildfire smoke in WKY rats.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Michelle F Fyle, Grace Little, Molly Harmon, Brandi Martin, Wendy Oshiro, Kathrine McDaniel, Yong Ho Kim, M Ian Gilmour, Aimen K Farraj, Mehdi S Hazari
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Abstract

Diet and living conditions are modifiers of behavioral and cardiovascular health, yet the combined effect is understudied, and their potential to alter responses to environmental stressors like wildfire smoke (WS) requires characterization. The purpose of this study was to determine whether housing enrichment (1) mitigates adverse cardiometabolic and neurobehavioral effects following a high fructose diet and (2) decreases responses to WS. Male Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats were divided into either depleted (DH) or enriched housing (EH) and fed a normal (ND) or high-fructose (HF) diet. Body composition, metabolism, and behavior were assessed over 30-weeks and cardiac function tested after a single exposure to either filtered air (FA) or flaming eucalyptus WS. EH rats exhibited significantly lower % body fat and higher % lean mass, no difference in weight, and significantly lower respiratory exchange ratio (RER) during the light phase, indicating a shift in basal metabolism after 13 weeks. EH rats habituated faster to acoustic startle and displayed less prepulse inhibition than DH, associated with improved learning and locomotor activity. In general, the effect of housing on behavior was greater than diet, while HF worsened within-group responses. WS increased blood and left ventricular pressure and contractility in EH rats, which was blunted by HF. Thus, housing enrichment appears to (1) improve certain systemic functions and behaviors and (2) enhance cardiovascular responses following WS, but partially blunting the effect of HF. These results indicate a complex interaction between housing and diet over the long-term and potentially altered adverse health risks from environmental smoke exposures.

住房和高果糖饮食对WKY大鼠对桉树野火烟雾的行为和心血管反应的影响。
饮食和生活条件是行为和心血管健康的调节因素,但两者的综合作用尚未得到充分研究,它们改变对野火烟雾(WS)等环境压力源的反应的潜力需要表征。本研究的目的是确定住房富集是否(1)减轻高果糖饮食后对心脏代谢和神经行为的不良影响,(2)减少对WS的反应。雄性Wistar-Kyoto (WKY)大鼠分为贫(DH)和富(EH)两组,分别饲喂正常(ND)和高果糖(HF)日粮。在单次暴露于过滤空气(FA)或燃烧桉树WS后,对30周内的身体成分、代谢和行为进行了评估,并对心功能进行了测试。EH大鼠在光照期表现出较低的体脂%和较高的瘦质量%,体重无差异,呼吸交换率(RER)显著降低,表明13周后基础代谢发生了变化。与DH相比,EH大鼠对声惊吓的适应更快,脉冲前抑制更少,这与学习和运动活动的改善有关。总的来说,住房对行为的影响大于饮食,而HF恶化了组内反应。WS增加EH大鼠血、左心室压和收缩力,而HF使其钝化。因此,住房富集似乎(1)改善了某些系统功能和行为,(2)增强了WS后的心血管反应,但部分减弱了HF的作用。这些结果表明,长期住房和饮食之间存在复杂的相互作用,并可能改变环境烟雾暴露带来的不利健康风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
19.20%
发文量
46
审稿时长
8-16 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A , Current Issues is an authoritative journal that features strictly refereed original research in the field of environmental sciences, public and occupational health, and toxicology.
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