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Publication : High-sucrose diets contribute to brain angiopathy with impaired glucose uptake and psychosis-related higher brain dysfunctions in mice.

First Author  Hirai S Year  2021
Journal  Sci Adv Volume  7
Issue  46 Pages  eabl6077
PubMed ID  34757783 Mgi Jnum  J:319924
Mgi Id  MGI:6826914 Doi  10.1126/sciadv.abl6077
Citation  Hirai S, et al. (2021) High-sucrose diets contribute to brain angiopathy with impaired glucose uptake and psychosis-related higher brain dysfunctions in mice. Sci Adv 7(46):eabl6077
abstractText  Metabolic dysfunction is thought to contribute to the severity of psychiatric disorders; however, it has been unclear whether current high-simple sugar diets contribute to pathogenesis of these diseases. Here, we demonstrate that a high-sucrose diet during adolescence induces psychosis-related behavioral endophenotypes, including hyperactivity, poor working memory, impaired sensory gating, and disrupted interneuron function in mice deficient for glyoxalase-1 (GLO1), an enzyme involved in detoxification of sucrose metabolites. Furthermore, the high-sucrose diet induced microcapillary impairments and reduced brain glucose uptake in brains of Glo1-deficient mice. Aspirin protected against this angiopathy, enhancing brain glucose uptake and preventing abnormal behavioral phenotypes. Similar vascular damage to our model mice was found in the brains of randomly collected schizophrenia and bipolar disorder patients, suggesting that psychiatric disorders are associated with angiopathy in the brain caused by various environmental stresses, including metabolic stress.
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