Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to examine the impact of high-fat-diet(HFD)-induced obesity on pain sensitivity and tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) levels. The effect of moderate-intensity physical exercise, an anti-inflammatory non-pharmacological intervention, on pain scores was also investigated. Methods: Adult male C57BL/J6 mice were fed standard or an HFD for eight weeks. Their total body weight, food intake, locomotor and motivational behavior, and pain reflexes were measured. A subgroup of animals underwent physical exercise for five days per week over six weeks. Blood was collected for glucose tolerance testing and levels of lactate. Urine samples were collected to measure BH4 levels. Results: We showed that the HFD increased weight gain, epididymal white adipose tissue, and the percentage of body weight as epididymal fat. These anthropometric alterations were characterized by impaired glucose tolerance at four and eight weeks of the dietary intervention. It was also observed that reduced locomotor activity and higher pain scores in the HFD-fed mice were prevented by a physical exercise intervention. The HFD also induced an increase in urinary BH4 levels at four and eight weeks of intervention. Conclusions: The HFD increased scores of chemical and mechanical hyperalgesias, as well as urinary BH4 levels. Urinary BH4 can be proposed as a potential easy-to-access, sensitive, and reliable biomarker of pain development, and a promising target for the control of pain hypersensitivity in obesity.