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Chronic stress aggravates glucose intolerance in leptin receptor-deficient (db/db) mice
Authors:Maria Razzoli  Jacob McCallum  Allison Gurney  William C Engeland  Alessandro Bartolomucci
Institution:Department of Integrative Biology and Physiology, University of Minnesota, Cancer and Cardiovascular Research Building, 2231 6th St SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA ;Department of Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN USA
Abstract:Genetic predisposition and environmental challenges interact to determine individual vulnerability to obesity and type 2 diabetes. We previously established a mouse model of chronic subordination stress-induced hyperphagia, obesity, metabolic like-syndrome and insulin resistance in the presence of a high-fat diet. However, it remains to be established if social stress could also aggravate glucose intolerance in subjects genetically predisposed to develop obesity and type 2 diabetes. To answer this question, we subjected genetically obese mice due to deficiency of the leptin receptor (db/db strain) to chronic subordination stress. Over five weeks, subordination stress in db/db mice led to persistent hyperphagia, hyperglycemia and exacerbated glucose intolerance altogether suggestive of an aggravated disorder when compared to controls. On the contrary, body weight and fat mass were similarly affected in stressed and control mice likely due to the hyperactivity shown by subordinate mice. Stressed db/db mice also showed increased plasma inflammatory markers. Altogether our results suggest that chronic stress can aggravate glucose intolerance but not obesity in genetically predisposed subjects on the basis of a disrupted leptin circuitry.
Keywords:Social defeat  Subordination  Corticosterone  Metabolic function
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