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Preference and detrimental effects of high fat, sugar, and salt diet in wild‐caught Drosophila simulans are reversed by flight exercise
Author(s) -
Murashov Alexander K.,
Pak Elena S.,
Lin ChienTe,
Boykov Ilya N.,
Buddo Katherine A.,
Mar Jordan,
Bhat Krishna M.,
Neufer Peter Darrell
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
faseb bioadvances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2573-9832
DOI - 10.1096/fba.2020-00079
Subject(s) - sugar , biology , drosophila (subgenus) , obesity , adverse effect , physiology , medicine , endocrinology , food science , zoology , genetics , gene , pharmacology
High saturated fat, sugar, and salt contents are a staple of a Western diet (WD), contributing to obesity, metabolic syndrome, and a plethora of other health risks. However, the combinatorial effects of these ingredients have not been fully evaluated. Here, using the wild‐caught Drosophila simulans, we show that a diet enriched with saturated fat, sugar, and salt is more detrimental than each ingredient separately, resulting in a significantly decreased lifespan, locomotor activity, sleep, reproductive function, and mitochondrial function. These detrimental effects were more pronounced in female than in male flies. Adding regular flight exercise to flies on the WD markedly negated the adverse effects of a WD. At the molecular level, the WD significantly increased levels of triglycerides and caused mitochondrial dysfunction, while exercise counterbalanced these effects. Interestingly, fruit flies developed a preference for the WD after pre‐exposure, which was averted by flight exercise. The results demonstrate that regular aerobic exercise can mitigate adverse dietary effects on fly mitochondrial function, physiology, and feeding behavior. Our data establish Drosophila simulans as a novel model of diet‐exercise interaction that bears a strong similarity to the pathophysiology of obesity and eating disorders in humans.

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