| Literature DB >> 20065962 |
W D Pierce1, A Diane, C D Heth, J C Russell, S D Proctor.
Abstract
The adaptive hypothesis that an obese-prone genotype confers a fitness advantage when challenged with food restriction and food-related locomotion was tested using a rat model. Juvenile (35-40 days) and adolescent (45-50 days) JCR:LA-cp rats, obese prone (cp/cp) and lean prone (+/?), were exposed to 1.5 h daily meals and 22.5 h of voluntary wheel running, a procedure that normally leads to self-starvation. Genotype had a dramatic effect on survival of rats when exposed to the challenge of food restriction and wheel running. Although similar in initial body weight, obese-prone juveniles survived twice as long, and ran three times as far, as their lean-prone counterparts. Biochemical measures indicated that young obese-prone animals maintained blood glucose and fat mass, whereas lean-prone rats depleted these energy reserves. Corticosterone concentration indicated that obese-prone juveniles exhibited a lower stress response to the survival challenge than lean-prone rats, possibly due to lower energy demands and greater energy reserves. Collectively, the findings support the hypothesis that an obese-prone genotype provides a fitness advantage when food supply is inadequate, but is deleterious during periods of food surfeit, such as the energy-rich food environment of prosperous and developing societies worldwide.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20065962 DOI: 10.1038/ijo.2009.294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Obes (Lond) ISSN: 0307-0565 Impact factor: 5.095