Obesity weighs down memory through a mechanism involving the neuroepigenetic dysregulation of Sirt1

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Abstract

Aberrant gene expression within the hippocampus has recently been implicated in the pathogenesis of obesity-induced memory impairment. Whether a dysregulation of epigenetic modifications mediates this disruption in gene transcription has yet to be established. Here we report evidence of obesity-induced alterations in DNA methylation of memory-associated genes, including Sirtuin 1 (Sirt1), within the hippocampus, and thus offer a novel mechanism by which SIRT1 expression within the hippocampus is suppressed during obesity. Forebrain neuron-specific Sirt1 knock-out closely recapitulated the memory deficits exhibited by obese mice, consistent with the hypothesis that the high-fat diet-mediated reduction of hippocampal SIRT1 could be responsible for obesity-linked memory impairment. Obese mice fed a diet supplemented with the SIRT1-activating molecule resveratrol exhibited increased hippocampal SIRT1 activity and preserved hippocampus-dependent memory, further strengthening this conclusion. Thus, our findings suggest that the memory-impairing effects of diet-induced obesity may potentially be mediated by neuroepigenetic dysregulation of SIRT1 within the hippocampus.

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Heyward, F. D., Gilliam, D., Coleman, M. A., Gavin, C. F., Wang, J., Kaas, G., … David Sweatt, J. (2016). Obesity weighs down memory through a mechanism involving the neuroepigenetic dysregulation of Sirt1. Journal of Neuroscience, 36(4), 1324–1335. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1934-15.2016

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