Mb. Noel et B. Woodside, EFFECTS OF SYSTEMIC AND CENTRAL PROLACTIN INJECTIONS ON FOOD-INTAKE, WEIGHT-GAIN, AND ESTROUS CYCLICITY IN FEMALE RATS, Physiology & behavior, 54(1), 1993, pp. 151-154
It has been suggested that prolactin may contribute to the hyperphagia
of lactation. Studies examining the effects of the systemic administr
ation of prolactin on food intake, however, have produced varying resu
lts. In species other than the rat, central prolactin administration h
as been found to increase food intake, but it is not known if central
prolactin administration increases food intake in rats. In the current
study the effects of peripheral and central prolactin administration
on food intake, weight gain, and estrous cyclicity in female rats were
compared. Prolactin was administered twice daily at 0800 and at 1900
h either subcutaneously at 3 mg/kg or 1 mg/kg b.wt. or by intracerebro
ventricular (ICV) infusion (2 mug/0.5 mul) for 10 days to female rats.
Control animals received similar injections of vehicle. Food intake,
body weight, and vaginal smears were taken daily. Results showed that
peripheral administration of prolactin increased food intake and weigh
t gain and disrupted vaginal cyclicity. In contrast, ICV administratio
n increased food intake to the same extent as did systemic prolactin a
dministration but had no effect on weight gain or cyclicity. These dat
a suggest that prolactin acts both peripherally and centrally to regul
ate energy balance in the female rat.