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Prolonged Consumption of Sweetened Beverages Lastingly Deteriorates Cognitive Functions and Reward Processing in Mice

Autor
Kursa, Miron
Florian, Cédrick
Hamelin, Héloïse
Hamed, Adam
Granon, Sylvie
Poizat, Ghislaine
Taouis, Mohammed
Callebert, Jacques
Rampon, Claire
Pittaras, Elsa
Data publikacji
2022
Abstrakt (EN)

We investigated the detrimental effects of chronic consumption of sweet or sweetened beverages in mice. We report that consumption of beverages containing small amounts of sucrose during several weeks impaired reward systems. This is evidenced by robust changes in the activation pattern of prefrontal brain regions associated with abnormal risk-taking and delayed establishment of decision-making strategy. Supporting these findings, we find that chronic consumption of low doses of artificial sweeteners such as saccharin disrupts brain regions’ activity engaged in decision-making and reward processes. Consequently, this leads to the rapid development of inflexible decisions, particularly in a subset of vulnerable individuals. Our data also reveal that regular consumption, even at low doses, of sweet or sweeteners dramatically alters brain neurochemistry, i.e., dopamine content and turnover, and high cognitive functions, while sparing metabolic regulations. Our findings suggest that it would be relevant to focus on long-term consequences on the brain of sweet or sweetened beverages in humans, especially as they may go metabolically unnoticed.

Słowa kluczowe EN
artificial sweetener
decision-making
prefrontal cortex
risk-taking
sugar
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki biologiczne
Czasopismo
Cerebral Cortex
Tom
32
Zeszyt
7
Strony od-do
1365–1378
ISSN
1047-3211
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