Sachdeo Bryn L Y, Yu Lei, Giunta Gina M, Bello Nicholas T
Nutritional Sciences Graduate Program, School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, United States.
Department of Genetics, School of Arts and Sciences, and Center of Alcohol Studies, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, United States.
Front Psychol. 2019 Feb 11;10:246. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00246. eCollection 2019.
Impairments in opioid receptor signaling have been implicated in disordered eating. A functional variant of the gene is a guanine (G) substitution for adenine (A) at the 118 position of exon 1 (A118G). The influence of the A118G variant on binge eating behaviors and the effectiveness of pharmacotherapies used to treat binge eating have not been characterized. Mice were generated with A to G substitution at the 112 position on exon 1 to produce a murine equivalent of the human A118G variant. Homozygous female mice (AA or GG) were exposed to intermittent access to a highly palatable sweet-fat food with or without prior calorie deprivation to promote dietary-induced binge eating. There were no genotype-dependent differences in the dietary-induced binge eating. However, GG mice exposed to intermittent calorie restriction (Restrict) had higher body weights compared with GG mice exposed to intermittent sweet fat-food (Binge) and feeding (Naive). Acute oral dosing of lisdexamfetamine (0.15, 0.5, and 1.5 mg/kg) or sibutramine (0.3, 1, and 3 mg/kg) did not produce genotype-dependent differences in binge-like eating. In addition, no genotype-dependent differences in binge-like eating were observed with chronic (14-day) dosing of lisdexamfetamine (1.5 mg/kg/day) or sibutramine (3 mg/kg/day). In the chronic dosing, body weights were higher in the GG Restrict compared with AA Restrict. Our findings suggest that the A112G polymorphism does not influence binge eating behaviors or pharmacotherapies for treating binge eating.
阿片受体信号传导受损与饮食失调有关。该基因的一个功能变体是外显子1第118位的腺嘌呤(A)被鸟嘌呤(G)取代(A118G)。A118G变体对暴饮暴食行为的影响以及用于治疗暴饮暴食的药物疗法的有效性尚未得到明确。通过将外显子1第112位的A替换为G来培育小鼠,以产生与人类A118G变体等效的小鼠变体。将纯合雌性小鼠(AA或GG)间歇性地给予高脂高糖食物,无论是否事先进行卡路里限制,以促进饮食诱导的暴饮暴食。饮食诱导的暴饮暴食没有基因型依赖性差异。然而,与暴露于间歇性高脂高糖食物(暴饮暴食组)和自由进食(正常组)的GG小鼠相比,暴露于间歇性卡路里限制(限制组)的GG小鼠体重更高。急性口服赖氨酸安非他明(0.15、0.5和1.5毫克/千克)或西布曲明(0.3、1和3毫克/千克)在暴饮暴食样进食方面没有产生基因型依赖性差异。此外,长期(14天)给予赖氨酸安非他明(1.5毫克/千克/天)或西布曲明(3毫克/千克/天),在暴饮暴食样进食方面也未观察到基因型依赖性差异。在长期给药中,与AA限制组相比,GG限制组的体重更高。我们的研究结果表明,A112G多态性不影响暴饮暴食行为或治疗暴饮暴食的药物疗法。