Study objective: Emerging evidence now suggest reduced mitochondrial function as a key initiator in Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-like pathology increasing the need for models of AD that display mitochondrial dysfunction. Dyslipidemia is a common aliment from overconsumption of a high fat diet (HFD) that increases the risk of AD and may contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction. Rodent studies utilize HFDs to induce brain pathology resembling that of AD. Unsurprisingly, rodent studies are rarely recapitulated in humans, which leads to a very low clinical success rate and highlights the need for more translatable models to study AD-like pathology. Swine seem to share many characteristics of humans and might offer a more translatable model to study HFD induced pathology. Thus, the objective of this study was to determine if HFD feeding in swine could offer a more translatable model to study mitochondrial dysfunction during neurodegeneration. Hypothesis: 6-months of HFD feeding will decrease indices of mitochondrial function and biogenesis in female Ossabaw swine. Methods: To characterize the effects of a HFD on brain mitochondrial health in a highly translatable swine model, high resolution respirometry measurements were taken from isolated brain mitochondria from in female Ossabaw swine fed a HFD for 6-months. Additionally, indices of mitochondrial biogenesis in whole tissue was measured (transcriptional markers of biogenesis and citrate synthase activity). Results: HFD feeding significantly increased body weight (p<0.05) with trending increases in blood glucose (p<0.10). Maximal uncoupled mitochondrial respiration was significantly decreased (p<0.05) with state 3-complex I and state 3 complex I & II trending down in the dorsal hippocampus (DH) after HFD diet feeding (p<0.10). Additionally, state 2 respiration was significantly decreased in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) after HFD feeding (p<0.05). HFD feeding increased transcriptional markers of mitochondrial biogenesis in the DH and PFC (p<0.05), without altering whole homogenate citrate synthase activity in either brain region. Conclusions: These data indicate HFD feeding in Ossabaw pigs could offer a potential model to study pathologies relating to mitochondrial dysfunction during neurodegenerative process. Additionally, the DH was found to be more vulnerable to HFD-induced perturbations, evident by the exacerbated deficits in mitochondrial respiration in this brain region. Finally, these data suggest HFD-induced increase in transcriptional markers of mitochondrial biogenesis may be a compensatory response to HFD-induced mitochondrial respiration deficits. However, citrate synthase activity was not different between groups indicating this upregulation of transcriptional markers was unable to translate to an increase in mitochondrial content in the DH and PFC. The project was supported by the MU Office of Postdoctoral Education Research Grant Program. Additional funding was also generously provided Scott Rector. Images in figure 2 adapted and modified from “Krebs cycle template”, by BioRender.com (2022). Retrieved from https://app.biorender.com/biorender-templates . This work was also supported with resources and the use of facilities at the University of Missouri and Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans Hospital in Columbia, Missouri. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2023 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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