Obesity and drugs of abuse share overlapping neural circuits and behaviors. Silent synapses are transient synapses that are important for remodeling brain circuits. They are prevalent during early development but largely disappear by adulthood. Drugs of abuse increase silent synapses during adulthood and may facilitate reorganizing brain circuits around drug-related experience, facilitating addiction and contributing to relapse during treatment and abstinence. Whether obesity causes alterations in the expression of silent synapses in a manner similar to drugs of abuse has not been examined. Using a dietary-induced obesity paradigm, mice that chronically consumed high fat diet (HFD) exhibited increased silent synapses in both direct and indirect pathway medium spiny neurons in the dorsolateral striatum. Both the time of onset of increased silent synapses and their normalization upon discontinuation of HFD occurs on an extended time scale compared to drugs of abuse. These data demonstrate that chronic consumption of HFD, like drugs of abuse, can alter mechanisms of circuit plasticity likely facilitating neural reorganization analogous to drugs of abuse.
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