20 research outputs found
Long-Lasting Metabolic Imbalance Related to Obesity Alters Olfactory Tissue Homeostasis and Impairs Olfactory-Driven Behaviors
Obesity is associated with chronic food intake disorders and binge eating. Food intake relies on the interaction between homeostatic regulation and hedonic signals among which, olfaction is a major sensory determinant. However, its potential modulation at the peripheral level by a chronic energy imbalance associated to obese status remains a matter of debate. We further investigated the olfactory function in a rodent model relevant to the situation encountered in obese humans, where genetic susceptibility is juxtaposed on chronic eating disorders. Using several olfactory-driven tests, we compared the behaviors of obesity-prone Sprague-Dawley rats (OP) fed with a high-fat/high-sugar diet with those of obese-resistant ones fed with normal chow. In OP rats, we reported 1) decreased odor threshold, but 2) poor olfactory performances, associated with learning/memory deficits, 3) decreased influence of fasting, and 4) impaired insulin control on food seeking behavior. Associated with these behavioral modifications, we found a modulation of metabolism-related factors implicated in 1) electrical olfactory signal regulation (insulin receptor), 2) cellular dynamics (glucorticoids receptors, pro- and antiapoptotic factors), and 3) homeostasis of the olfactory mucosa and bulb (monocarboxylate and glucose transporters). Such impairments might participate to the perturbed daily food intake pattern that we observed in obese animal
EFFECT OF AMBIENT TEMPERATURE ON FOOD, NITROGEN AND ENERGY INTAKE OF THE FIELD-VOLE, MICROTUS ARVALIS, UNDER DIFFERENT CONDITIONS OF DAYLIGHT RATIO AND FEEDING
International audienc
Effects of timed melatonin infusions and lesions of the suprachiasmatic nuclei on prolactin and progesterone secretions in pregnant or pseudopregnant mink (Mustela vison)
International audienc
Endogenous circannual rhythms and photorefractoriness of testis activity, moult and prolactin concentrations in mink (Mustela vison)
International audienc
Distribution of arginine-vasopressin and vasoactive intestinal peptide messenger RNA in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the sheep
International audienc
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the mink (Mustela vison) could play a key role in photic induction
International audienc
Plasma levels of cortisol and oxytocin, and uterine activity after cervical artificial insemination in the ewe
International audienc
Plasma levels of cortisol and oxytocin, and uterine activity after cervical artificial insemination in the ewe
The objective was to compare in the ewe the effects of easy and difficult procedures
for artificial insemination (AI) (as related to rapid or poor accessibility of the cervix,
respectively) on plasma cortisol (CORT) and oxytocin (OT), and uterine motility. All AI
were simulated using a catheter empty of semen to study genital and environmental
stimuli only. In experiment 1, 40 ewes were sampled after AI, and whether it was an
easy or difficult procedure was reported for each animal. While CORT concentrations
rose to a similar amount in all ewes, whatever the AI procedure, a significant OT
response occurred after a difficult procedure only () (17.4 1.7 versus
12.7 0.7 pgmL before AI, ). In experiment 2, uterine
activity was monitored in 4 ewes using an implantable telemetric transmitter equipped with
an intrauterine pressure catheter. An increased uterine activity occurred during
2 1 min after an easy AI (), whereas the evoked activity lasted for
15 4 min after a difficult AI (, ). A similar long-lasting
response occurred after OT administration (100 mIU, i.v.). We concluded that
the increase in uterine motility after a difficult AI resulted from a reflex
release of OT, and not to a âstressâ effect