Clegg Deborah J, Benoit Stephen C, Reed Jacquelyn A, Woods Stephen C, Dunn-Meynell Ambrose, Levin Barry E
University of Cincinnati, Department of Psychiatry, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2005 Apr;288(4):R981-6. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00675.2004. Epub 2004 Dec 16.
Rats prone to develop diet-induced obesity (DIO) have reduced central sensitivity to many metabolic and hormonal signals involved in energy homeostasis. High-fat diets produce similar defects in diet-resistant (DR) rats. To test the hypothesis that genotype and diet exposure would similarly affect central insulin signaling, we assessed the anorectic effects of 8 mU third ventricular (iv3t) insulin before and after 4 wk intake of a 31% fat, high-energy (HE) diet intake in outbred (OutB) rats. Rats were retrospectively designated as DR or DIO by their low or high weight gains on HE diet. Before the HE diet, iv3t insulin reduced 4-h and 24-h chow intake by 53% and 69% in DR rats but by only 17% and 27% in DIO rats, respectively. Also, the anorectic response to iv3t insulin in OutB rats was inversely correlated (r = 0.72, P = 0.002) with subsequent 4-wk weight gain on the HE diet. Similarly, in selectively bred (SB) chow-fed DR rats, 8 mU iv3t insulin reduced 4-h and 24-h intake by 21% and 22%, respectively, but had no significant effect in SB DIO rats. Four-week HE diet intake reduced 4-h and 24-h insulin-induced anorexia by 45% in OutB DR rats and completely abolished it in SB DR rats. Reduced insulin responsiveness was unassociated with differences in arcuate nucleus insulin receptor mRNA expression between DIO and DR rats or between rats fed chow or HE diet. These data suggest that DIO rats have a preexisting reduction in central insulin signaling, which might contribute to their becoming obese on the HE diet. However, since the HE diet reduced central insulin sensitivity in DR rats but did not make them obese, it is likely that other brain areas are involved in insulin's anorectic action or that other pathways contribute to the development and maintenance of obesity.
易发生饮食诱导性肥胖(DIO)的大鼠对许多参与能量稳态的代谢和激素信号的中枢敏感性降低。高脂饮食在抗饮食性肥胖(DR)大鼠中也会产生类似的缺陷。为了验证基因型和饮食暴露会同样影响中枢胰岛素信号传导这一假设,我们评估了远交(OutB)大鼠在摄入31%脂肪的高能量(HE)饮食4周前后,第三脑室注射(iv3t)8 mU胰岛素的厌食效应。根据大鼠在HE饮食上的低体重增加或高体重增加,将其回顾性地分为DR或DIO。在HE饮食之前,iv3t胰岛素使DR大鼠的4小时和24小时食物摄入量分别减少了53%和69%,但在DIO大鼠中仅分别减少了17%和27%。此外,OutB大鼠对iv3t胰岛素的厌食反应与随后在HE饮食上4周的体重增加呈负相关(r = 0.72,P = 0.002)。同样,在选择性繁殖(SB)的正常饮食喂养的DR大鼠中,8 mU iv3t胰岛素分别使4小时和24小时的食物摄入量减少了21%和22%,但对SB DIO大鼠没有显著影响。四周的HE饮食摄入使OutB DR大鼠中4小时和24小时胰岛素诱导的厌食减少了45%,并在SB DR大鼠中完全消除了这种厌食。胰岛素反应性降低与DIO和DR大鼠之间或正常饮食或HE饮食喂养的大鼠之间弓状核胰岛素受体mRNA表达的差异无关。这些数据表明,DIO大鼠预先存在中枢胰岛素信号传导的降低,这可能导致它们在HE饮食上变得肥胖。然而,由于HE饮食降低了DR大鼠的中枢胰岛素敏感性,但并未使它们肥胖,因此可能其他脑区参与了胰岛素的厌食作用,或者其他途径有助于肥胖的发生和维持。