A high-refined carbohydrate diet (HC diet) has shown impacts not only on metabolic disorders, but also on cognitive and behavioral functions. However, its effects at the protein and morphological level in the brain are not known. In order to investigate the differential expression of proteins in the brain of Balb/c mice fed with a HC diet and treated or not with glibenclamide, biochemical and histological assays were performed. The brains of animals fed for eight weeks with a standard rodent diet or HC diet, and treated or not with glibenclamide for four weeks were homogenized and the supernatant was subjected to 12.5% SDS-PAGE. The brains were also blocked and 3 μm sections were stained with Hematoxylin-Eosin and analyzed using light microscopy. The electrophoretic profile of samples from untreated animals revealed protein expression without significant differences, while the group treated with glibenclamide revealed protein bands with differential expression (44.8, 42.2 and 39.8 KDa). The proteins were predicted using a bioinformatic tool and it is suggested that, for the most part, they are related to the energy metabolism of the brain. Histological analysis of the hippocampus demonstrated similarities between animals fed with a standard diet and HC diet, but with differences in the number of neurons in the CA2 and CA3 regions, and a tendency to cell death in the dentate gyrus of animals group HC diet. These results revealed one of the regions of the brain affected by excess carbohydrates, as well as candidate proteins for proteomic analysis to further investigate the effects of dietary sugars on molecular mechanisms and neurogenesis in the hippocampus.
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