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Consumption of a high‐fat diet, but not regular endurance exercise training, regulates hypothalamic lipid accumulation in mice
High-fat diet, but not regular endurance exercise, changes fat buildup in the brain's hunger control area in mice
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Abstract
A total of 335 lipid molecular species were identified and quantified in the hypothalamus of mice subjected to different dietary conditions.
- Increased dietary fat intake was associated with higher body mass, hepatic lipid accumulation, and glucose intolerance in mice.
- Specific lipids linked to insulin resistance, such as ceramide, diacylglycerol, and cholesterol esters, showed significant increases in hypothalamic tissue of high-fat diet mice.
- Endurance exercise training did not alter hypothalamic lipid levels in high-fat fed mice.
- Hypothalamic lipid content was unchanged in ob/ob mice, indicating that obesity itself may not influence these lipid levels.
- Overall, dietary lipid content regulates hypothalamic lipid accumulation, which appears resistant to changes from endurance exercise.
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