Visceral fat delivers signal to the brain that hurts cognition

April, 2020

A mouse study explains why excessive weight around our middle affects cognition. It seems that such fat, known as visceral adiposity, generates high, chronic levels of a signal that encourages the formation of inflammasome complexes that amplify the immune response and inflammation.

A protein called NLRP3 is a core component of the inflammasome complex in the fat, and it’s what promotes the production and release of interleukin-1 beta by fat cells. When NLRP3 was blocked in mice, they became protected against such inflammation and cognitive problems. When visceral adipose tissue from obese mice and obese mice missing NLRP3 was transplanted into lean mice, the tissue from those missing NLRP3 had no deleterious effect, but the tissue from the intact obese mice caused increased levels of interleukin-1 beta in the hippocampus, and impaired cognition.

Mice missing interleukin-1 beta’s receptor on the microglia were also protected.

There are indications that interleukin-1 beta also prompts microglia to wrap around synapses, potentially interfering with the communication between neurons.

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-03/mcog-vfd030220.php

Guo, D.-H., Yamamoto, M., Hernandez, C. M., Khodadadi, H., Baban, B., & Stranahan, A. M. (2020). Visceral adipose NLRP3 impairs cognition in obesity via IL-1R1 on CX3CR1+ cells. The Journal of Clinical Investigation, 130(4), 1961–1976. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI126078

Related News

Data from over 5,000 individuals found that a measure of belly fat (waist:hip ratio) was associated with reduced cognitive function in older Irish adults (60+). Body mass index (BMI), however, was found to protect cognitive function.

Brain scans of 9,772 people aged 44 to 79, who were enrolled in the UK Biobank study, have revealed that smoking, high blood pressure, high pulse pressure, diabetes, and high BMI — but not high cholesterol — were all linked to greater brain shrinkage, less

A small study involving 50 younger adults (18-35; average age 24) has found that those with a higher BMI performed significantly worse on a computerised memory test called the “Treasure Hunt Task”.

Data from 11 different cohort studies, involving more than 600,000 people from around the world, has found that:

A mouse study has found that obese mice had high levels of interleukin 1 in both their blood and their brains, and this was associated with:

A study involving 130 HIV-positive people has found that memory impairment was associated with a significantly larger waistline.

Obesity has been linked to cognitive decline, but a new study involving 300 post-menopausal women has found that higher BMI was associated with higher cognitive scores.

Growing evidence links obesity and poorer cognitive performance. Many factors associated with obesity, such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and sleep apnea, damage the brain.

The new label of ‘metabolic syndrome’ applies to those having three or more of the following risk factors: high blood pressure, excess belly fat, higher than normal triglycerides, high blood sugar and low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (the "good" cholesterol).

Research into the link, if any, between cholesterol and dementia, has been somewhat contradictory. A very long-running Swedish study may explain why.

Pages

Subscribe to Latest newsSubscribe to Latest newsSubscribe to Latest health newsSubscribe to Latest news