Metabolic benefits of gastric bypass surgery in the mouse: The role of fecal losses

Roux-en-Y gastric surgery (RYGB) promotes a rapid and sustained weight loss and amelioration of glucose control in obese patients. A high number of molecular hypotheses were previously tested using duodenal-jejunal bypass (DJB) performed in various genetic models of mice with knockouts for various h...

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Published inMolecular metabolism (Germany) Vol. 31; pp. 14 - 23
Main Authors Barataud, Aude, Vily-Petit, Justine, Goncalves, Daisy, Zitoun, Carine, Duchampt, Adeline, Philippe, Erwann, Gautier-Stein, Amandine, Mithieux, Gilles
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany Elsevier GmbH 01.01.2020
Elsevier
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Summary:Roux-en-Y gastric surgery (RYGB) promotes a rapid and sustained weight loss and amelioration of glucose control in obese patients. A high number of molecular hypotheses were previously tested using duodenal-jejunal bypass (DJB) performed in various genetic models of mice with knockouts for various hormones or receptors. The data were globally negative or inconsistent. Therefore, the mechanisms remained elusive. Intestinal gluconeogenesis is a gut function that has been suggested to contribute to the metabolic benefits of RYGB in obese patients. We studied the effects of DJB on body weight and glucose control in obese mice fed a high fat-high sucrose diet. Wild type mice and mice with a genetic suppression of intestinal gluconeogenesis were studied in parallel using glucose- and insulin-tolerance tests. Fecal losses, including excretion of lipids, were studied from the feces recovered in metabolic cages. DJB induced a dramatic decrease in body weight and improvement in glucose control (glucose- and insulin-tolerance) in obese wild type mice fed a high calorie diet, for 25 days after the surgery. The DJB-induced decrease in food intake was transient and resumed to normal in 7–8 days, suggesting that decreased food intake could not account for the benefits. Total fecal losses were about 5 times and lipid losses 7 times higher in DJB-mice than in control (sham-operated and pair-fed) mice, and could account for the weight loss of mice. The results were comparable in mice with suppression of intestinal gluconeogenesis. There was no effect of DJB on food intake, body weight or fecal loss in lean mice fed a normal chow diet. DJB in obese mice fed a high calorie diet promotes dramatic fecal loss, which could account for the dramatic weight loss and metabolic benefits observed. This could dominate the effects of the mouse genotype/phenotype. Thus, fecal energy loss should be considered as an essential process contributing to the metabolic benefits of DJB in obese mice. •Duodenal-jejunal bypass (DJB) promotes weight loss in mice fed a high calorie diet.•DJB induces dramatic fecal energy losses in mice fed a high calorie diet.•DJB has no effect in mice fed a control (starch-based) diet.•There is no fecal losses in DJB-mice fed a control diet.•Fecal energy loss is a cause of body weight loss in DJB-mice fed high calorie diet.
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ISSN:2212-8778
2212-8778
DOI:10.1016/j.molmet.2019.11.006