Griggio M A, Richard D, Leblanc J
Departamento de Fisiologia, Escola Paulista de Medicina, São Paulo, Brazil.
Int J Obes. 1991 Nov;15(11):711-5.
The acute effect of food intake on the activity of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) in both heart and brown adipose tissue (BAT) was investigated in mice. Upon delivery to the laboratory mice were housed singly and divided into two groups. Half the mice were accustomed to eat their daily food ration in two meals whereas the other half were given continuous access to food. SNS activity in both heart and BAT was estimated by measuring the accumulation of dopamine (DA) after having blocked the transformation of dopamine into noradrenaline (NA) with 1-cyclohexyl-2-mercapto-imidazole (CHMI). CHMI inhibits the enzyme dopamine beta-hydroxylase. On the day SNS activity was assessed, continuously fed (CF) or meal-fed (MF) mice were injected with either saline or CHMI one hour before being killed. In order to assess the anticipatory effects of being fed, a group of mice already accustomed to the meal-feeding schedule were not allowed to eat after the injections. Additional CF and MF mice were killed without being injected in order to determine the basal levels of both DA and NA. The results show that the accumulation of DA in both heart and BAT was higher in MF than CF mice regardless of whether MF mice were or were not fed after the injection of CHMI. It therefore appears that the intake of food may increase SNS activity in various tissues in mice, and that such a response may be largely of cephalic origin.