The lipostat, hyperphagia and catch-up growth

Citation
M. Jobling et Sjs. Johansen, The lipostat, hyperphagia and catch-up growth, AQUAC RES, 30(7), 1999, pp. 473-478
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
AQUACULTURE RESEARCH
ISSN journal
1355557X → ACNP
Volume
30
Issue
7
Year of publication
1999
Pages
473 - 478
Database
ISI
SICI code
1355-557X(199907)30:7<473:TLHACG>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
The hypothesis that long-term energy intake is matched to energy expenditur e arose during the 1950s, and this formed the basis of the lipostatic model for the control of food intake in mammals. This gave rise to an additional hypothesis that body weight varies little over adult life because body fat , a variable related to body mass, is regulated. There is now a large body of evidence that adipose tissue plays a role in the regulation of feeding a nd body weight in mammals, and the study of the mechanisms by which the bra in monitors the signals arising from the adipose tissue is currently a majo r area of research. After a period of nutritional restriction, a number of compensatory responses are invoked, and these result in hyperphagia, rapid weight increase and the repletion of energy reserves. However, the extent t o which animals recover lost body weight has been reported to vary between studies. It is hypothesized that the rate at which animals replete their li pid reserves during catch-up growth may influence the hyperphagic response and, hence, whether or not there is complete recovery of body weight, Preli minary tests carried out using some data collected in studies of catch-up g rowth in salmonids appear to provide support for the model, but more experi mental studies are needed to provide rigorous testing.