Alternate-day fasting differentially affects body composition, metabolic and immune response to fasting in male rats exposed to early-life adversity: Modulatory role of cafeteria diet
Sara C. Sagae, Edson D. R. Paz, Bárbara Zanardini, Ana Claudia Amaral, Gabriela A. Bronczek, Patrícia Koehler-Santos, Jarbas R. de Oliveira, Celso R. Franci, Márcio V. F. Donadio, Parker J. Holman, Charlis Raineki

TL;DR
This study shows that alternate-day fasting can reduce the negative effects of early-life stress on metabolism and immunity in rats, but only when combined with a healthy diet.
Contribution
The study reveals that the effectiveness of alternate-day fasting in mitigating early-life adversity depends on diet type and feeding regimen.
Findings
Adversely reared rats on a chow diet with ADF had reduced body weight and fat pad weight.
Adversely reared rats on a cafeteria diet with ADF showed increased inflammation markers like IL-1β and IL-6.
Diet type and feeding regimen interact to influence metabolic and immune outcomes in early-life adversity.
Abstract
The increased risk for obesity and metabolic disorders following early-life adversity is aggravated by poor diet (e.g., cafeteria diet). Alternate-day fasting (ADF) is a dietary regimen shown to improve immune and metabolic dysfunction related to obesity. Here, we evaluate if ADF can ameliorate the negative effects of early-life adversity and/or cafeteria diet on biological, immune and metabolic parameters. At weaning, animals reared under normal or adverse conditions (i.e., low bedding) were fed either standard chow or cafeteria diets ad libitum or subjected to an ADF regimen. In adulthood, we measured 24-hour fasted cholesterol, triglycerides, cytokines, oxidative stress markers, and body composition parameters including perigonadal, retroperitoneal, and brown fat pad weight. Animals exposed to early-life adversity respond differently to cafeteria diet and ADF. Adverse reared animals…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDietary Effects on Health · Diet and metabolism studies · Regulation of Appetite and Obesity
