Pecoraro Norman, Reyes Faith, Gomez Francisca, Bhargava Aditi, Dallman Mary F
Department of Physiology, University of California San Francisco, 513 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, California 94143-0444.
Endocrinology. 2004 Aug;145(8):3754-62. doi: 10.1210/en.2004-0305. Epub 2004 May 13.
We suggested a new model of the effects of glucocorticoids (GCs) exerted during chronic stress, in which GCs directly stimulate activities in the brain while indirectly inhibiting activity in the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis through their metabolic shifts in energy stores in the periphery. This study is an initial test of our model. In a 2 x 2 design, we provided ad lib access to calorically dense lard and sucrose (comfort food) + chow or chow alone, and repeatedly restrained half of the rats in each group for 5 d (3 h/d). We measured caloric intake, body weight, caloric efficiency, ACTH, corticosterone (B), and testosterone during the period of restraint and leptin, insulin, and fat depot weights, as well as hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor mRNA at the end of the period. We hypothesized that chronically restrained rats would exhibit a relative increase in comfort food ingestion and that these rats would have reduced HPA responses to repeated restraint. Although total caloric intake was reduced in both groups of restrained rats, compared with controls, the proportion of comfort food ingested increased in the restrained rats compared with their nonrestrained controls. Moreover, caloric efficiency was rescued in the stressed, comfort food group. Furthermore, ACTH and B responses to the repeated restraint bouts were reduced in the rats with access to comfort food. Corticotropin-releasing factor mRNA was reduced in control rats eating comfort food compared with those eating chow, but there were no differences between the stressed groups. The results of this experiment tend to support our model of chronic effects of stress and GCs, showing a stressor-induced preference for comfort food, and a comfort-food reduction in activity of the HPA axis.
我们提出了一种糖皮质激素(GCs)在慢性应激期间发挥作用的新模型,其中GCs直接刺激大脑活动,同时通过其在外周能量储存中的代谢变化间接抑制下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)轴的活动。本研究是对我们模型的初步测试。在一个2×2设计中,我们为大鼠提供高热量的猪油和蔗糖(安慰食物)+普通食物或仅提供普通食物,任其自由采食,并对每组中的一半大鼠进行5天(每天3小时)的反复束缚。我们在束缚期间测量了热量摄入、体重、热量效率、促肾上腺皮质激素(ACTH)、皮质酮(B)和睾酮,在束缚期结束时测量了瘦素、胰岛素和脂肪储存重量,以及下丘脑促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子mRNA。我们假设,长期受到束缚的大鼠会表现出安慰食物摄入量相对增加,并且这些大鼠对反复束缚的HPA反应会降低。虽然两组受束缚大鼠的总热量摄入均减少,但与对照组相比,受束缚大鼠摄入的安慰食物比例相对于未受束缚的对照组有所增加。此外,在有安慰食物的应激组中,热量效率得到了恢复。此外,有安慰食物的大鼠对反复束缚刺激的ACTH和B反应降低。与吃普通食物的对照大鼠相比,吃安慰食物的对照大鼠的促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子mRNA减少,但应激组之间没有差异。本实验结果倾向于支持我们关于应激和GCs慢性影响的模型,表明应激源会导致对安慰食物的偏好,以及安慰食物会降低HPA轴的活性。