On the roles of the Duodenum and the Vagus nerve in learned nutrient preferences

T Qu, W Han, J Niu, J Tong, IE de Araujo - Appetite, 2019 - Elsevier
T Qu, W Han, J Niu, J Tong, IE de Araujo
Appetite, 2019Elsevier
Background and aim In most species, including humans, food preference is primarily
controlled by nutrient value. However, the gut-brain pathways involved in preference
learning remain elusive. The aim of the present study, performed in C57BL6/J mice, was to
characterize the roles in nutrient preference of two critical elements of gut-brain pathways, ie
the duodenum and vagal gut innervation. Methods Adult wild-type C57BL6/J mice from a
normal-weight cohort sustained one of the following three procedures: duodenal-jejunal …
Background and aim
In most species, including humans, food preference is primarily controlled by nutrient value. However, the gut-brain pathways involved in preference learning remain elusive. The aim of the present study, performed in C57BL6/J mice, was to characterize the roles in nutrient preference of two critical elements of gut-brain pathways, i.e. the duodenum and vagal gut innervation.
Methods
Adult wild-type C57BL6/J mice from a normal-weight cohort sustained one of the following three procedures: duodenal-jejunal bypass intestinal rerouting (DJB), total subdiaphragmatic vagotomy (SDV), or sham surgery. Mice were assessed in short-term two-bottle preference tests before and after 24 h s exposures to solutions containing one of glutamate, lipids, sodium, or glucose.
Results
DJB and SDV interfered in preference formation in a nutrient-specific manner: whereas normal preference learning for lipids and glutamate was disrupted by both DJB and SDV, these interventions did not alter the formation of preferences for glucose. Interestingly, sodium preferences were abrogated by DJB but not by SDV.
Conclusions
Different macronutrients make use of distinct gut-brain pathways to influence food preferences, thereby mirroring nutrient-specific processes of food digestion. Specifically, whereas both vagal innervation and duodenal sensing appear critical for generating responses to fats and protein, glucose preferences recruit post-duodenal, vagal-independent pathways in pair with the control of glucose homeostasis. Overall, our data suggest that the physiological processes involved in digesting and absorbing fats, amino acids, and glucose overlap with those mediating learned preferences for each of these nutrients.
Elsevier