Literature DB >> 9627091

Behavioral deficits in monosodium glutamate rats: specific changes in the structure of feeding behavior.

A Stricker-Krongrad1, C Burlet, B Beck.   

Abstract

We studied the feeding rhythms and feeding patterns of adult Long-Evans rats treated with monosodium glutamate (MSG) in their early post-natal period. This treatment is known to induce neuronal degeneration in the arcuate nucleus (ARC), a major hypothalamic site implicated in the regulation of feeding. Neonatal rats were treated intraperitoneally with MSG or saline (controls) alone on the first days of life. At age of 6 months, male control and male MSG rats were placed in our automatic feeding system, and the structure of feeding behavior and diurnal feeding rhythms were analysed. On a 24 hours basis, MSG rats ate less than control rats (-24%). This hypophagia resulted from a mild diurnal hyperphagia (+6%) and a pronounced nocturnal hypophagia (-34%). This hypophagia was the main consequence of a decrease of meal size in MSG rats (-37%) and was associated with an increase in meal duration (+52%). It was also associated with a total disappearance of the two feeding peaks that normally occur at light and dark onset in the rat (-90% 2 h after dark onset and -49% 2 h before light onset). These results indicate that neonatal treatment with MSG induces important changes in feeding patterns and feeding rhythms in the adulthood. These changes might be related to the disappearance of neurotransmitters located in the arcuate nucleus.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9627091     DOI: 10.1016/s0024-3205(98)00187-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Life Sci        ISSN: 0024-3205            Impact factor:   5.037


  3 in total

1.  Development of neurological reflexes and motor coordination in rats neonatally treated with monosodium glutamate.

Authors:  P Kiss; A Tamas; A Lubics; M Szalai; L Szalontay; I Lengvari; D Reglodi
Journal:  Neurotox Res       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 3.911

2.  Effects of the neonatal treatment with monosodium glutamate on myenteric neurons and the intestine wall in the ileum of rats.

Authors:  Angélica Soares; João Paulo Ferreira Schoffen; Elsa Maria De Gouveia; Maria Raquel Marçal Natali
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 7.527

Review 3.  Steroid-induced sexual differentiation of the developing brain: multiple pathways, one goal.

Authors:  Jaclyn M Schwarz; Margaret M McCarthy
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2008-04-01       Impact factor: 5.372

  3 in total

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