Long-Term High-Fat High-Fructose Diet Induces Type 2 Diabetes in Rats through Oxidative Stress.

Nutrients

The Key Laboratory of Geriatrics, Beijing Institute of Geriatrics, Institute of Geriatric Medicine, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing Hospital/National Center of Gerontology of National Health Commission, Beijing 100730, China.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how a long-term high-fat, high-fructose (HFHF) diet affects the pancreas and its role in type 2 diabetes (T2DM) by comparing HFHF-fed rats to those on a normal diet over 3 and 18 months.
  • - After 3 months on the HFHF diet, rats showed increased pancreatic islet size, but after 18 months, the islets became irregular and shrank, indicating potential dysfunction of insulin production.
  • - Early signs of oxidative stress were observed before inflammation in the HFHF diet group, suggesting that changes at the cellular level could contribute to the deterioration of pancreatic function related to T2DM.

Article Abstract

Long-term consumption of a Western diet is a major cause of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, the effects of diet on pancreatic structure and function remain unclear. Rats fed a high-fat, high-fructose (HFHF) diet were compared with rats fed a normal diet for 3 and 18 months. Plasma biochemical parameters and inflammatory factors were used to reflect metabolic profile and inflammatory status. The rats developed metabolic disorders, and the size of the islets in the pancreas increased after 3 months of HFHF treatment but decreased and became irregular after 18 months. Fasting insulin, C-peptide, proinsulin, and intact proinsulin levels were significantly higher in the HFHF group than those in the age-matched controls. Plasmatic oxidative parameters and nucleic acid oxidation markers (8-oxo-Gsn and 8-oxo-dGsn) became elevated before inflammatory factors, suggesting that the HFHF diet increased the degree of oxidative stress before affecting inflammation. Single-cell RNA sequencing also verified that the transcriptional level of oxidoreductase changed differently in islet subpopulations with aging and long-term HFHF diet. We demonstrated that long-term HFHF diet and aging-associated structural and transcriptomic changes that underlie pancreatic islet functional decay is a possible underlying mechanism of T2DM, and our study could provide new insights to prevent the development of diet-induced T2DM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9182436PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu14112181DOI Listing

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