# Peri‐ and Postnatal High Fat Feeding Have Differential Effects on Executive Function and Associated Neurobiology in Aged Male and Female Mice

**Authors:** Laura Contu, Adam Johnson, Christopher J. Heath, Cheryl A. Hawkes

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/acel.70223 · Aging Cell · 2025-09-07

## TL;DR

Feeding mice a high-fat diet after birth harms their thinking skills, but a high-fat diet during pregnancy may help older mice by boosting brain chemicals linked to memory.

## Contribution

Shows that postnatal high-fat diets harm cognition, while perinatal high-fat diets may have age-dependent benefits.

## Key findings

- Postnatal high-fat feeding worsens executive function in adult and aged mice.
- Perinatal high-fat feeding may improve cognitive performance in older male mice.
- Increased cholinergic activity in the prefrontal cortex is linked to perinatal high-fat diets.

## Abstract

Almost half of pregnant women globally are currently estimated to be overweight or obese. Rates of childhood obesity are also on the rise, in part because of increased consumption of dietary saturated fats. However, the long‐term effect of peri‐ and postnatal high fat (HF) feeding on cognitive function and neuronal expression has not yet been investigated. Male and female C57BL/6J mice born to dams fed a control (C) or high fat (HF) diet were themselves fed either the C or HF diet, generating four experimental groups: C/C, C/HF, HF/C, and HF/HF, representing the peri‐ and postnatal diets, respectively. Offspring underwent evaluation of executive function using the two‐choice paired visual discrimination reversal (PVDR) task at 6 and 12 months of age. Brain tissues were then processed for markers of serotonin, GABA, glutamate, and acetylcholine using RT‐qPCR, Western blotting, and immunohistochemistry. At 6 months of age, C/HF and HF/HF mice performed significantly worse on the PVDR task compared to C/C and HF/C offspring. Perinatal diet did not affect performance at this age. However, 12‐month‐old HF/C males reached criteria more quickly than C/C male mice, suggesting improved cognitive performance. Levels of NeuN were increased in the prefrontal cortex of HF/C animals, alongside a selective increase in markers of acetylcholine. These results suggest that postnatal HF feeding negatively impacts executive function in both adult and aged mice, but consumption of the same diet during the perinatal period only may be beneficial in older age, possibly due to increased cholinergic innervation of the prefrontal cortex.

Postnatal high fat (HF) feeding negatively impacts executive function in both adult and aged mice, but consumption of the same diet during the perinatal period only is beneficial in older age. Maternal HF diet is associated with increased cholinergic innervation of the prefrontal cortex of young, but not aged, offspring.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** RBFOX3 (RNA binding fox-1 homolog 3)
- **Chemicals:** serotonin (PubChem CID 5202), GABA (PubChem CID 119), glutamate (PubChem CID 611), acetylcholine (PubChem CID 187)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** Rbfox3 (RNA binding protein, fox-1 homolog (C. elegans) 3) [NCBI Gene 52897] {aka Fox-3, Hrnbp3, NeuN, Neuna60}
- **Diseases:** overweight (MESH:D050177), obese (MESH:D009765)
- **Chemicals:** glutamate (MESH:D018698), saturated fats (-), acetylcholine (MESH:D000109), GABA (MESH:D005680), serotonin (MESH:D012701)
- **Species:** Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12611268/full.md

## References

62 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12611268/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12611268