Lee T Kevin, Lee Caroline, Bischof Robert, Lambert Gavin W, Clarke Iain J, Henry Belinda A
Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3800, Australia.
CSIRO Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2014 Sep;47:166-77. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2014.05.015. Epub 2014 May 29.
The underlying cause of predisposition to obesity is complex but one marker is cortisol responsiveness. Selection of sheep for high (HR) or low (LR) cortisol responses to adrenocorticotropin shows that HR are more likely to become obese. Increased propensity to obesity is associated with reduced skeletal muscle thermogenesis. We sought to determine whether metabolic or behavioral responses to stress also contribute to altered propensity to obesity in LR and HR. Animals (n=5-10/group) were exposed to 3 stressors and we measured food intake and thermogenesis (recorded with dataloggers implanted into muscle). Stressors were hypoglycaemia (0.125 units/kg insulin, IV), a barking dog and immune challenge (200 ng/kg lipopolysaccharide--LPS, IV). LR animals showed a greater catabolic state in response to both immune and psychosocial stressors. LPS reduced (P<0.01) food intake in both groups but LR showed a greater (P<0.05) reduction in food intake and a more substantial (P<0.05) rise in muscle temperature. Introduction of the barking dog reduced (P<0.05) food intake in LR only. These metabolic differences coincided with differences in cortisol responsiveness, where HR animals had increased (P<0.05) cortisol in response to both immune and psychosocial stressors. We also assessed behavior in the following paradigms: 1, isolation in the open field test; 2, response to a human intruder; and 3, food competition. LR had greater (P<0.05) activity, reduced fearfulness and displayed a proactive coping style of behavior. Thus we demonstrate that high cortisol responsiveness identifies animals with stress-induced metabolic and behavioral traits that may contribute to susceptibility to obesity.
易患肥胖症的潜在原因很复杂,但一个标志是皮质醇反应性。选择对促肾上腺皮质激素有高(HR)或低(LR)皮质醇反应的绵羊表明,HR绵羊更易肥胖。肥胖倾向增加与骨骼肌产热减少有关。我们试图确定对压力的代谢或行为反应是否也会导致LR和HR动物肥胖倾向的改变。将动物(每组n = 5 - 10只)暴露于3种应激源下,我们测量了食物摄入量和产热(通过植入肌肉的数据记录器记录)。应激源包括低血糖(静脉注射0.125单位/千克胰岛素)、吠叫的狗和免疫挑战(静脉注射200纳克/千克脂多糖-LPS)。LR动物对免疫和心理社会应激源均表现出更大的分解代谢状态。LPS使两组的食物摄入量均减少(P<0.01),但LR组的食物摄入量减少幅度更大(P<0.05),肌肉温度升高幅度更大(P<0.05)。引入吠叫的狗仅使LR组的食物摄入量减少(P<0.05)。这些代谢差异与皮质醇反应性的差异一致,HR动物对免疫和心理社会应激源的皮质醇水平均升高(P<0.05)。我们还在以下范式中评估了行为:1,旷场试验中的隔离;2,对人类入侵者的反应;3,食物竞争。LR组具有更高的活动水平(P<0.05),恐惧减少,并表现出积极主动的应对行为方式。因此,我们证明高皮质醇反应性可识别出具有应激诱导的代谢和行为特征的动物,这些特征可能导致肥胖易感性。