Literature DB >> 16930774

Food motivated behavior of melanocortin-4 receptor knockout mice under a progressive ratio schedule.

C Vaughan1, M Moore, C Haskell-Luevano, N E Rowland.   

Abstract

Melanocortin-4 receptor knockout (MC4RKO) mice are hyperphagic and develop obesity under free feeding conditions. We reported previously that MC4RKO mice did not maintain hyperphagia and as a result lost weight when required to press a lever to obtain food on a fixed ratio procurement schedule. To assess the generality of this result, we tested MC4RKO mice and their heterozygous and wild type littermates using progressive ratio (PR) schedules that are believed to be sensitive indicators of motivation. Mice lived in operant chambers and obtained all of their food (20mg pellets) via lever press responding. Food was available according to a PR schedule so that within a meal, food became progressively more costly, and we expected this would provide a stringent test of mechanisms controlling meal size. The schedule reset after either 3 or 20min of no responding, so defining meals, and the highest ratio completed before the reset was defined as the breakpoint. The average daily number of meals was lower and mean size of meals was higher at the 20 compared with the 3min reset condition. Mean daily food intake did not differ between the two reset criteria but did differ as a function of genotype, with MC4RKO mice eating about 25% more than heterozygous or wild type mice. Hyperphagia in the MC4RKO mice was characterized primarily by larger meals (higher breakpoints) and they emitted about twice as many responses as wild type mice. Thus, using a PR schedule, MC4RKO mice exhibit hyperphagia, and show a high level of motivation to support large meal sizes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16930774     DOI: 10.1016/j.peptides.2006.07.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Peptides        ISSN: 0196-9781            Impact factor:   3.750


  17 in total

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