Literature DB >> 16530962

High-fat hyperphagia in neurotrophin-4 deficient mice reveals potential role of vagal intestinal sensory innervation in long-term controls of food intake.

Mardi S Byerly1, Edward A Fox.   

Abstract

Neurotrophin-4 (NT-4) deficient mice exhibit substantial loss of intestinal vagal afferent innervation and short-term deficits in feeding behavior, suggesting reduced satiation. However, they do not show long-term changes in feeding or body weight because of compensatory behaviors. The present study examined whether high-fat hyperphagia induction would overcome compensation and reveal long-term effects associated with the reduced vagal sensory innervation of NT-4 mutants. First, modifications of a feeding schedule previously developed in rats were examined in wild-type mice to identify the regimen most effective at producing hyperphagia. The most successful schedule, which was run for 26 days, included access to a 43%-fat diet and pelleted chow every other day and access to only powdered chow on the alternate days. On high-fat access days mice consumed 25% more calories than mice with continuous daily access to the same high-fat diet and pelleted chow. This feeding regimen also induced hyperphagia in NT-4 deficient mice and their wild-type controls: on high-fat exposure days mutants consumed 35% more calories relative to continuous-access mutants, and wild types ate 25% more than continuous-access wild types. Moreover, on high-fat access days the alternating NT-4 mutants significantly increased caloric intake by 9% compared to alternating wild types. Thus, high-fat hyperphagia appeared to override compensation, permitting short-term changes in meal consumption by mutants that accrued into long-term changes in total daily food intake. This raises the possibility that intestinal vagal sensory innervation contributes to long-term, as well as to short-term regulation of food intake.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16530962     DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2006.02.047

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosci Lett        ISSN: 0304-3940            Impact factor:   3.046


  5 in total

1.  Treating diet-induced obesity: a new role for vagal afferents?

Authors:  Edward A Fox
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2012-03-22       Impact factor: 3.199

Review 2.  Early postnatal overnutrition: potential roles of gastrointestinal vagal afferents and brain-derived neurotrophic factor.

Authors:  Edward A Fox; Jessica E Biddinger
Journal:  Physiol Behav       Date:  2012-06-06

Review 3.  Vagal afferent controls of feeding: a possible role for gastrointestinal BDNF.

Authors:  Edward A Fox
Journal:  Clin Auton Res       Date:  2012-06-21       Impact factor: 4.435

4.  Effect of food deprivation or short-term Western diet feeding on BDNF protein expression in the hypothalamic arcuate, paraventricular, and ventromedial nuclei.

Authors:  Kaitlyn E Gilland; Edward A Fox
Journal:  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol       Date:  2017-02-15       Impact factor: 3.619

5.  Repeated binge access to a palatable food alters feeding behavior, hormone profile, and hindbrain c-Fos responses to a test meal in adult male rats.

Authors:  Nicholas T Bello; Angela S Guarda; Chantelle E Terrillion; Graham W Redgrave; Janelle W Coughlin; Timothy H Moran
Journal:  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol       Date:  2009-06-17       Impact factor: 3.619

  5 in total

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