Houpt K A, Houpt T R, Pond W G
Yale J Biol Med. 1979 May-Jun;52(3):307-29.
The use of the pig for studies of food intake and obesity is reviewed. Effects of ambient temperature and taste on food intake as well as satiety factors impicating both neural and hormonal mechanisms originating in the gastrointestinal tract are considered; the integration of information in the central nervous system for both internal and external sources is hypothesized. Special concerns of food intake controls in the neonate are discussed, including effects of neonate sweet preference on food intake, gastrointestinal satiety factors, and hypoglycemia as a stimulus for food ingestion.For obesity studies, pigs offer several advantages, including their general physiological similarity to humans, similar fat cell size, and body fat distribution. Lipogenesis, lipolysis, and lipid mobilization are under intensive study in swine and the information obtained may have important application in studies of human obesity. The voluminous literature on metabolic differences between genetically lean versus obese populations of pigs suggests possibilities for application in humans. Greater characterization of differences and similarities between pigs and humans in important metabolic parameters related to regulation of food intake and obesity should facilitate better understanding and control of human obesity.
本文综述了猪在食物摄入和肥胖研究中的应用。考虑了环境温度和味道对食物摄入的影响,以及涉及起源于胃肠道的神经和激素机制的饱腹感因素;假设中枢神经系统会整合来自内部和外部来源的信息。讨论了新生儿食物摄入控制的特殊问题,包括新生儿对甜味的偏好对食物摄入的影响、胃肠道饱腹感因素以及低血糖作为食物摄入的刺激因素。对于肥胖研究,猪具有几个优势,包括它们在一般生理上与人类相似、脂肪细胞大小相似以及身体脂肪分布相似。猪的脂肪生成、脂肪分解和脂质动员正在深入研究中,所获得的信息可能在人类肥胖研究中有重要应用。关于基因瘦型与肥胖型猪群代谢差异的大量文献表明了其在人类研究中的应用可能性。对猪和人类在与食物摄入调节和肥胖相关的重要代谢参数方面的差异和相似性进行更全面的表征,应有助于更好地理解和控制人类肥胖。