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Operant Training for Highly Palatable Food Alters Translating Messenger RNA in Nucleus Accumbens D Neurons and Reveals a Modulatory Role of Ncdn. | LitMetric

Operant Training for Highly Palatable Food Alters Translating Messenger RNA in Nucleus Accumbens D Neurons and Reveals a Modulatory Role of Ncdn.

Biol Psychiatry

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale Unite Mixte de Recherche-S 1270, Paris, France; Faculty of Sciences and Engineering, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France; Institut du Fer à Moulin, Paris, France. Electronic address:

Published: May 2024

Background: Highly palatable food triggers behavioral responses including strong motivation. These effects involve the reward system and dopamine neurons, which modulate neurons in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). The molecular mechanisms underlying the long-lasting effects of highly palatable food on feeding behavior are poorly understood.

Methods: We studied the effects of 2-week operant conditioning of mice with standard or isocaloric highly palatable food. We investigated the behavioral responses and dendritic spine modifications in the NAc. We compared the translating messenger RNA in NAc neurons identified by the type of dopamine receptors they express, depending on the kind of food and training. We tested the consequences of invalidation of an abundant downregulated gene, Ncdn.

Results: Operant conditioning for highly palatable food increased motivation for food even in well-fed mice. In wild-type mice, free choice between regular and highly palatable food increased weight compared with access to regular food only. Highly palatable food increased spine density in the NAc. In animals trained for highly palatable food, translating messenger RNAs were modified in NAc neurons expressing dopamine D receptors, mostly corresponding to striatal projection neurons, but not in neurons expressing D receptors. Knockout of Ncdn, an abundant downregulated gene, opposed the conditioning-induced changes in satiety-sensitive feeding behavior and apparent motivation for highly palatable food, suggesting that downregulation may be a compensatory mechanism.

Conclusions: Our results emphasize the importance of messenger RNA alterations in D striatal projection neurons in the NAc in the behavioral consequences of highly palatable food conditioning and suggest a modulatory contribution of Ncdn downregulation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11059129PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.08.006DOI Listing

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