渴望食物
渴求
伏隔核
心理学
多巴胺能
后代
神经科学
奖励制度
多巴胺
纹状体
怀孕
好奇心
腹侧纹状体
发展心理学
上瘾
生物
遗传学
作者
Roberta Haddad-Tóvolli,Sara Ramírez,Emma Muñoz‐Moreno,Maria Milà‐Guasch,Lluís Miquel-Rio,Macarena Pozo,Íñigo Chivite,Jordi Altirriba,Arnaud Obri,Alícia G. Gómez-Valadés,Míriam Toledo,Elena Eyre,Analı́a Bortolozzi,Emmanuel Valjent,Guadalupe Sòria,Marc Claret
标识
DOI:10.1038/s42255-022-00557-1
摘要
Preparation for motherhood requires a myriad of physiological and behavioural adjustments throughout gestation to provide an adequate environment for proper embryonic development1. Cravings for highly palatable foods are highly prevalent during pregnancy2 and contribute to the maintenance and development of gestational overweight or obesity3. However, the neurobiology underlying the distinct ingestive behaviours that result from craving specific foods remain unknown. Here we show that mice, similarly to humans, experience gestational food craving-like episodes. These episodes are associated with a brain connectivity reorganization that affects key components of the dopaminergic mesolimbic circuitry, which drives motivated appetitive behaviours and facilitates the perception of rewarding stimuli. Pregnancy engages a dynamic modulation of dopaminergic signalling through neurons expressing dopamine D2 receptors in the nucleus accumbens, which directly modulate food craving-like events. Importantly, persistent maternal food craving-like behaviour has long-lasting effects on the offspring, particularly in males, leading to glucose intolerance, increased body weight and increased susceptibility to develop eating disorders and anxiety-like behaviours during adulthood. Our results reveal the cognitively motivated nature of pregnancy food cravings and advocates for moderating emotional eating during gestation to prevent deterioration of the offspring's neuropsychological and metabolic health.
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