Abstract

Neural plasticity is an intrinsic and essential characteristic of the nervous system that allows animals “self-tuning” to adapt to their environment over their lifetime. Activity-dependent synaptic plasticity in the central nervous system is a form of neural plasticity that underlies learning and memory formation, as well as long-lasting, environmentally-induced maladaptive behaviors, such as drug addiction and overeating of palatable hyper-caloric (PHc) food. In western societies, the abundance of PHc foods has caused a dramatic increase in the incidence of overweight/obesity and related disorders. To this regard, it has been suggested that increased adiposity may be caused at least in part by behavioral changes in the affected individuals that are induced by the chronic consumption of PHc foods; some authors have even drawn attention to the similarity that exists between over-indulgent eating and drug addiction. Long-term misuse of certain dietary components has also been linked to chronic neuroimmune maladaptation that may predispose individuals to neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease. In this review article, we discuss recent evidence that shows how consumption of PHc food can cause maladaptive neural plasticity that converts short-term ingestive drives into compulsive behaviors. We also discuss the neural mechanisms of how chronic consumption of PHc foods may alter brain function and lead to cognitive impairments, focusing on prenatal, childhood and adolescence as vulnerable neurodevelopmental stages to dietary environmental insults. Finally, we outline a societal agenda for harnessing permissive obesogenic environments.

Highlights

  • Given the abundance and omnipresence of palatable hyper-caloric (PHc) foods, overweight and obesity have become a pandemic phenotype in a large portion of the world’s population (WHO, 2016a)

  • In the modern calorie-permissive societies, in which lower energy investments are required to obtain PHc food, those hard-wired capacities, which once evolved to cope with uncertain caloric availability in the wilderness and were evolutionary acquired as adaptive characters, clearly became maladaptive and do not promote health

  • Evidence reviewed here suggest that PHc food consumption is self-reinforcing and may further lead to health problems, including cognitive impairments and possibly neurodegenerative diseases that produce a decrease in general wellbeing and productivity

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Given the abundance and omnipresence of palatable hyper-caloric (PHc) foods, overweight and obesity have become a pandemic phenotype in a large portion of the world’s population (WHO, 2016a). An increased understanding of the underlying causes of obesity is warranted in order to better prevent and treat this growing and global health problem

Addictive Food and Neural Plasticity
Neural Plasticity and Addictive Behaviors
Outcome devaluation
PHc Food Consumption and Neural Plasticity
Cognitive Consequences of PHc Food Exposure and Increased Adiposity
Prevention and Sensitive Periods to Nutritional Environmental Insults
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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