I'll have to remember this
By UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Using laboratory models, scientists discovered that ingesting FDA-approved levels of saccharin, ACE-K, and stevia early in life may result in many changes to the body, including brain areas linked to memory and reward-motivated behavior.
Early-life high-sugar diets have been linked to impaired brain function, but what about low-calorie sugar substitutes?
According to recent research, they could have a negative impact on the
developing gut and brain.
Researchers from the University of Southern California Dornsife College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences report that adolescents who consumed the low-calorie sweeteners saccharin, ACE-K, and stevia showed long-term memory impairments in a study that was recently published in the journal JCI Insight.
- The results are consistent with
other studies that demonstrated sustained memory impairment in
adolescent rats who consume sugar.
- Consuming low-calorie
sweeteners also affected metabolic signaling in the body, which can lead
to diabetes and other metabolism-related diseases.
- Rats that ate low-calorie sweeteners as adolescents were less inclined to work for sugar as adults, but they ate more sugar if it was readily accessible, which is another factor that may influence the chance of developing metabolic disease.
Why It Matters
There is a broad range of advice on what to eat
and when to consume it. According to the researchers, information from studies
like these may aid consumers and medical professionals in making better
decisions at all stages of life.
“While our findings do not necessarily indicate
that someone should not consume low-calorie sweeteners in general, they do
highlight that habitual low-calorie sweetener consumption during early life may
have unintended, long-lasting impacts,” said Scott Kanoski, associate professor
of biological sciences at USC Dornsife.
What It Means for Humans
While most studies of low-calorie sweeteners
focus on one substance and use amounts far exceeding the norm, the researchers
made sure the study was in line with real-life conditions for people.
- Sweeteners tested include
saccharin, acesulfame potassium (ACE-K) and stevia — which are commonly
used in sweetened foods.
- The amount of sweetener
consumed fell within FDA-approved guidelines for humans.
In Their Words
“Research using rodent models and low-calorie sweeteners
has typically involved consumption levels that far exceed the FDA ‘acceptable
daily intake’ (ADI) levels and used only a single sweetener. To design our
research to be more applicable to humans, we kept consumption levels within the
ADI and used multiple low-calorie sweeteners to determine if effects were
specific to a given sweetener or general across sweeteners.” — Lindsey Schier,
Gabilan Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences at USC Dornsife
The Experiment
To determine the effect of low-calorie sweetener
consumption on memory, the researchers used methods that test object
recognition and spatial recognition.
Rats were provided water sweetened with either
stevia, ACE-K or saccharin or plain water, along with their normal food.
After a month, the rats’ memory was tested using two different methods — one
tests if they remember an object they’ve seen before and the other is a maze.
In the end, rats consuming sweetener were less likely to remember an object or
the path through the maze than those that drank only plain water.
What Else?
The scientists also found other effects among
the rats after they consumed sweeteners.
- They had fewer receptors on
their tongues that detect sweet taste.
- The biological mechanism in
their intestines that transports glucose into the blood was altered.
- Their brains had changed,
specifically in regions associated with memory control and reward-motivated
behavior.
What’s Next?
Kanoski and Schier say the findings reveal more
questions worth exploring, including:
- How do sweetener substitutes
cause a reduction in sweet taste receptors and how does that affect later
dietary behavior?
- What does the change in the
nutrient transport in the gut mean for health?
- What biological mechanisms link
sweetener consumption with the changes to the brain?
The researchers say they intend to explore ways
to reverse the long-lasting effects of adolescent low-calorie sweetener
consumption and to study how it influences food choices and preferences later
in life.
Reference: “Early-life low-calorie sweetener
consumption disrupts glucose regulation, sugar-motivated behavior, and memory
function in rats” by Linda Tsan, Sandrine Chometton, Anna M.R. Hayes, Molly E.
Klug, Yanning Zuo, Shan Sun, Lana Bridi, Rae Lan, Anthony A. Fodor, Emily E.
Noble, Xia Yang, Scott E. Kanoski and Lindsey A. Schier, 13 September
2022, JCI Insight.
DOI:
10.1172/jci.insight.157714
The study was funded by the National Institute
of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Insitute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, and the National Science
Foundation.