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Cell Metab ; 24(1): 75-90, 2016 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27411010

ABSTRACT

Non-nutritive sweeteners like sucralose are consumed by billions of people. While animal and human studies have demonstrated a link between synthetic sweetener consumption and metabolic dysregulation, the mechanisms responsible remain unknown. Here we use a diet supplemented with sucralose to investigate the long-term effects of sweet/energy imbalance. In flies, chronic sweet/energy imbalance promoted hyperactivity, insomnia, glucose intolerance, enhanced sweet taste perception, and a sustained increase in food and calories consumed, effects that are reversed upon sucralose removal. Mechanistically, this response was mapped to the ancient insulin, catecholamine, and NPF/NPY systems and the energy sensor AMPK, which together comprise a novel neuronal starvation response pathway. Interestingly, chronic sweet/energy imbalance promoted increased food intake in mammals as well, and this also occurs through an NPY-dependent mechanism. Together, our data show that chronic consumption of a sweet/energy imbalanced diet triggers a conserved neuronal fasting response and increases the motivation to eat.


Subject(s)
Eating/drug effects , Fasting , Neurons/metabolism , Neuropeptide Y/metabolism , Sucrose/analogs & derivatives , Adenylate Kinase/metabolism , Animals , Appetite/drug effects , Dopamine/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/drug effects , Drosophila melanogaster/physiology , Energy Intake/drug effects , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Homeostasis/drug effects , Hunger/drug effects , Insulin/metabolism , Male , Neurons/drug effects , Octopamine/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Sucrose/pharmacology , Sweetening Agents/pharmacology , Taste/drug effects
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