Alternate-Day High Fat-Normal Chow Diet Ameliorates HFD-Induced Obesity and Restores Intestinal Immunity

Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes. 2022 Dec 12:15:3843-3853. doi: 10.2147/DMSO.S392372. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the effect of alternating-day diet regimens on high-fat diet-induced metabolic disorders in mice.

Materials and methods: Eight-week-old C57BL/6J mice were fed with either a continuous normal chow diet (CD, n = 10), a continuous high-fat diet (HFD, n = 10), HFD alternating every 24 h with fasting (H-ADF, n = 20), or HFD alternating every 24 h with chow diet (H-ADC, n = 20) for 12 weeks. Weights were recorded weekly and oral glucose tolerance tests were performed 6 weeks after initiating the regimens. At the end of the study, blood samples were collected and serum insulin and lipids were measured; tissues were collected for histology and RNA-seq analysis.

Results: HFD significantly increased body weight and fat percentage, while HFD alternating with fasting or CD did not significantly affect body weight and fat percentage. The glucose intolerance induced by HFD was also significantly ameliorated in these two diet intervention groups. HFD-induced elevation of total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein and insulin were also reduced in H-ADF and H-ADC groups. Moreover, HFD-disturbed immunity, presented by Lysozyme C-1 (Lyz1) immunostaining and RNA-seq, was restored in both alternating-regimen groups, especially, with H-ADC. At the transcriptional level, some cell proliferation and lipid absorption pathways were down-regulated in both H-ADF and H-ADC groups compared to the continuous HFD group.

Conclusion: Alternating an HFD with a normal diet every 24 h effectively controls weight and prevents metabolic disorders and may act by affecting both fat absorption and intestinal immunity.

Keywords: absorption; high-fat diet; intermittent fasting; intestinal immunity; intestines; obesity.