Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Artificial sweetener in some 5,000 diet goods, beverages linked to anxiety

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved aspartame as a sweetener in 1981. Today, nearly 5,000 metric tons are produced each year.

Artificial sweetener in some 5,000 diet goods, beverages linked to anxiety

Aspartame, an artificial sweetener included in approximately 5,000 diet goods and beverages, has been linked by Florida State University College of Medicine researchers to anxiety-like behaviour in mice.

Along with producing anxiety in the mice who consumed aspartame, the effects extended up to two generations from the males exposed to the sweetener. The study is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


"What this study is showing is we need to look back at the environmental factors, because what we see today is not only what's happening today, but what happened two generations ago and maybe even longer," said co-author Pradeep Bhide, the Jim and Betty Ann Rodgers Eminent Scholar Chair of Developmental Neuroscience in the Department of Biomedical Sciences.

The study came about, in part, because of previous research from the Bhide Lab on the transgenerational effects of nicotine on mice. The research showed temporary, or epigenetic, changes in mice sperm cells. Unlike genetic changes (mutations), epigenetic changes are reversible and don't change the DNA sequence; however, they can change how the body reads a DNA sequence.

"We were working on the effects of nicotine on the same type of model," Bhide said. "The father smokes. What happened to the children?"

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved aspartame as a sweetener in 1981. Today, nearly 5,000 metric tons are produced each year. When consumed, aspartame becomes aspartic acid, phenylalanine and methanol, all of which can have potent effects on the central nervous system.

Led by doctoral candidate Sara Jones, the study involved providing mice with drinking water containing aspartame at approximately 15% of the FDA-approved maximum daily human intake. The dosage, equivalent to six to eight 8-ounce cans of diet soda a day for humans, continued for 12 weeks in a study spanning four years.

Pronounced anxiety-like behaviour was observed in the mice through various maze tests across multiple generations descending from the aspartame-exposed males.

"It was such a robust anxiety-like trait that I don't think any of us were anticipating we would see," Jones said. "It was completely unexpected. Usually, you see subtle changes."

When given diazepam, a drug used to treat anxiety disorder in humans, mice in all generations ceased to show anxiety-like behaviour.

Researchers are planning an additional publication from this study focused on how aspartame affected memory. Future research will identify the molecular mechanisms that influence the transmission of aspartame's effect across generations.

(ANI)

More For You

Tan Sri Sir Francis Yeoh delivers profound leadership talk at the Asian Business Awards 2025

Tan Sri Sir Francis Yeoh with Nihal Arthanayake

Tan Sri Sir Francis Yeoh delivers profound leadership talk at the Asian Business Awards 2025

Mahesh Liloriya

In a defining moment of the 27th Asian Business Awards, Tan Sri Sir Francis Yeoh delivered an extraordinary and deeply inspiring Leadership Talk on stage, in conversation with well-known British broadcaster Nihal Arthanayake.

The session stood out as one of the most powerful highlights of the evening, offering profound insight into the inner world of one of ASEAN’s most respected global business icons. Tan Sri, who had flown in directly from Malaysia for this historic occasion, moved the audience with his rare humility, spiritual depth, and striking clarity of thought.

Keep ReadingShow less