SPONTANEOUS FEEDING-RELATED MONOAMINE CHANGES IN ROSTROMEDIAL HYPOTHALAMUS OF THE OBESE ZUCKER RAT - A MICRODIALYSIS STUDY

Citation
M. Orosco et al., SPONTANEOUS FEEDING-RELATED MONOAMINE CHANGES IN ROSTROMEDIAL HYPOTHALAMUS OF THE OBESE ZUCKER RAT - A MICRODIALYSIS STUDY, Physiology & behavior, 57(6), 1995, pp. 1103-1106
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Behavioral Sciences",Physiology,"Behavioral Sciences",Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00319384
Volume
57
Issue
6
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1103 - 1106
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-9384(1995)57:6<1103:SFMCIR>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
Using microdialysis in freely moving rats, we have been able to observ e changes in monoamines from the ventromedial and paraventricular hypo thalamic nuclei before, during, and after spontaneous feeding. Because the genetically obese Zucker rat shows abnormalities related both to feeding and monoamines, it was of interest to investigate possible par ticularities in the monoaminergic variations around spontaneous feedin g. The profile of changes in Zucker rats was grossly similar to that o f Wistar rats: increases in 5-hydroxy-tryptamine (5-HT), 5-hydroxyindo lacetic acid (5-HIAA), and dopamine (DA), and decrease in dihydroxyphe nylacetic acid (DOPAC). However, the release in monoamines (5-HT and D A) was more dramatic and longer-lasting than in Wistar rats, while the changes in the metabolites were proportionnally less pronounced. This suggests that high concentrations of these feeding-related amines are released and remain in the synaptic cleft of the obese rat, possibly because they are required in larger amounts to bring about satiety. Th e hyperphagia of the obese Zucker rat may therefore be the result of a resistance to these prandially released satiety-promoting neurosubsta nces.