Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The OLETF rat, lacking CCK-A receptors, provides an important model for identifying roles for CCK in the controls of food intake and body weight. OLETF rats are obese and diabetic and express deficits in the control of the size of individual meals. Meal size in OLETF rats is doubled and although meal number is decreased, the decrease is not sufficient to prevent hyperphagia. Analyses of patterns of hypothalamic gene expression in OLETF rats indicate the presence of a primary deficit in DMH NPY signaling. These data suggest an important role for CCK in controlling NPY expression in a population of non-leptin regulated hypothalamic neurons. In the absence of this control, NPY is overexpressed, contributing to hyperphagia and obesity. Thus, the obesity in the OLETF rats may be the outcome of two regulatory disruptions, one depending upon a peripheral within meal satiety pathway and the other depending upon a central pathway critical to overall energy balance.
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PMID:Actions of CCK in the controls of food intake and body weight: lessons from the CCK-A receptor deficient OLETF rat. 1235 7

The regulation of body weight is a complex process which relies on a balance between supply of nutrients and demand on these nutrients in the form of energy expenditure. Various central and peripheral mechanisms play a crucial role in maintaining this balance. While various neuropeptides in the central nervous system (CNS), particularly in the hypothalamus, maintain the necessary harmony between hyperphagia and anorexia, peripheral signals arising from the gastrointestinal tract (cholecystokinin-8 [CCK-8], amylin), pancreas (insulin) and adipose tissue (leptin) provide the necessary stimuli or a feedback inhibition for the synthesis and secretion of these hypothalamic neuropeptides. Various metabolites of the carbohydrate and fat metabolism are also involved in regulating the neuronal activity in the hypothalamus which ultimately leads to a release of key neuropeptides. In addition to the central mechanisms, peripheral mechanisms that regulate energy expenditure, particularly in the brown adipose tissue and skeletal muscle, are critical in maintaining the overall balance. Insight into these mechanisms sets the stage for developing novel strategies in the treatment of emerging childhood diseases such as obesity, anorexia nervosa, and bulimia. Further, delineation of these processes in the fetus and newborn sets the stage for investigating their role in molding the adult phenotype due to intrauterine adaptations.
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PMID:Neurohumoral regulation of body weight gain. 1501 96

Although cholecystokinin A (CCK-A) receptors (CCK-AR) mediate the feeding inhibitory actions of CCK in both rats and mice, the absence of CCK-AR results in species-specific phenotypes. The lack of CCK-AR in Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima fatty (OLETF) rats results in hyperphagia and obesity. We have suggested that demonstrated increases in meal size and elevated levels of dorsomedial hypothalamic (DMH) neuropeptide Y (NPY) gene expression may contribute to this phenotype. In contrast to OLETF rats, CCK-AR(-/-) mice have normal total daily food intake and do not develop obesity. To assess the basis underlying the different phenotypes in rats and mice lacking CCK-AR, we characterized meal patterns in CCK-AR(-/-) mice and determined whether CCK-AR(-/-) mice exhibited an alteration in DMH NPY gene expression. We demonstrate that although CCK-AR(-/-) mice show a similar dysregulation in meal size as OLETF rats, they do not have an elevation in DMH NPY mRNA expression levels. In fact, intact mice have no CCK-AR in the DMH. Furthermore, in intact rats, NPY and CCK-AR are colocalized in DMH neurons, and parenchymal injection of CCK into the DMH reduces food intake and down-regulates DMH NPY mRNA expression. These results suggest that although CCK-AR plays a role in the mediation of CCK actions in the control of meal size in both rats and mice, CCK-AR seems to contribute to modulating DMH NPY levels only in rats. The deficit in CCK's action in the control of DMH NPY gene expression may play a major role in the obese phenotype in OLETF rats.
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PMID:Differential roles for cholecystokinin a receptors in energy balance in rats and mice. 1512 37

Binge eating disorder (BED), characterized by ingestion of very large meals without purging afterwards, is found in a subset of obese individuals. We showed previously that stomach capacity is greater in obese than in lean subjects, and in this study, we investigated capacity in obese individuals with BED. We also determined ad-libitum intake of a test meal until extremely full. Furthermore, we measured various appetitive hormones (insulin, leptin, glucagon, CCK, ghrelin) and glucose before a fixed meal and for 120 min afterwards. An acetaminophen tracer was used to assess gastric emptying rate. We compared three groups of overweight women: 11 BED, 13 BE (subthreshold BED), and 13 non-binge-eating normals. The BED individuals had the largest stomach capacity as assessed by either maximum volume tolerated (P=.05) or by gastric compliance to pressure (P=.02) using an intragastric balloon. Although test meal intake did not differ between groups, it correlated (P=.03) with gastric capacity. The BED group showed a tendency (P=.06) to have greater area under the curve (AUC) and had higher values at 5 and 60 min (P<.05) for insulin compared to normals. Moreover, the BED subjects had lower ghrelin baselines premeal, and lower AUC for ghrelin, which then declined less postmeal than for the normals (P<.05). None of the other blood values differed, including glucose, leptin glucagon, and CCK, as well as acetaminophen, reflecting gastric emptying. The lower ghrelin in BED, although contrary to what was expected, is consistent with lower ghrelin in obesity, and suggests down-regulation of ghrelin by overeating. The lack of differences in CCK is consistent with the lack of differences in gastric emptying rate, given that CCK is released when nutrients reach the intestine. The results show that BED subjects have a large gastric capacity as well as abnormalities in meal-related ghrelin and insulin patterns that may be factors in binge eating.
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PMID:Gastric capacity, test meal intake, and appetitive hormones in binge eating disorder. 1523 78

The influence of cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) on normal and insulin-induced feeding and expression of orexigenic hypothalamic neuropeptides was investigated in male rats. CCK-8, administered during meals (4 microg/kg) or continuously (32 microg/kg over 60 min), blunted the stimulating effect of insulin (50 IU/kg) on feeding by reducing meal size (-60%; P<0.05 or -86%; P<0.0001, respectively). Rats without access to food and injected with IP insulin (50 IU/kg) showed increased hypothalamic mRNA levels of orexin (+30%; P<0.05) and melanin-concentrating hormone (+52%; P<0.05), as compared with ad libitum-fed and saline-injected control rats. Continuous IP infusion of CCK-8 (32 microg/kg) blunted these increases. Our results suggest that both orexin and melanin-concentrating hormone participate in the response to insulin hypoglycemia without food being present; these neurons may be involved in mechanisms related to insulin-induced hyperphagia. Signals triggered by peripheral CCK-8 act to decrease the expression of orexin and melanin-concentrating hormone. This may be associated with a reduction in hyperphagia.
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PMID:Effect of CCK-8 on insulin-induced hyperphagia and hypothalamic orexigenic neuropeptide expression in the rat. 1565 51

Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima fatty (OLETF) rats lack the CCK-1 receptor, are hyperphagic, progressively become obese, and develop type-2 diabetes. We recently demonstrated an increased preference for both real and sham feeding of sucrose in this strain, suggesting altered orosensory sensitivity. To investigate taste functions, we used an automated gustometer with 10-s access to different concentrations of various sapid stimuli. Tests were repeated at 10 and 18 wk of age to assess the early and advanced stages of prediabetes, respectively. Compared with age-matched, nonmutant controls, the OLETF rats showed higher avidity for sucrose at both ages. This difference increased as a function of age and tastant concentration. An exaggerated response also occurred for saccharin, alanine, and fructose, but not for Polycose. Similarly, OLETF rats consumed monosodium-glutamate more at the lower concentrations compared with controls, an effect that age also accentuated. In contrast, there was no statistical strain or age differences in responses to NaCl, MgCl2, citric acid, quinine-HCl, and the trigeminal stimulus capsaicin. These findings demonstrate that compared with controls, OLETF rats differ in their gustatory functions with an overall augmented sensitivity for sweet that progresses during prediabetes. This effect explains their overconsumption of sweet solutions and may contribute to the overall hyperphagia and obesity in this strain.
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PMID:Altered taste sensitivity in obese, prediabetic OLETF rats lacking CCK-1 receptors. 1608 77

Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima fatty (OLETF) rats are a strain of Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) rats that do not express CCK-1 receptors, developing in adulthood, hyperphagia, obesity, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). We examined weight gain and meal patterns during a 30-min independent ingestion test on postnatal days 2-4 and again on days 9-11 in OLETF and LETO rat pups. OLETF pups were significantly heavier compared with their LETO controls at both ages, and they consumed significantly more of the sweet milk diet. The difference in intake can be attributed to a significant increase in meal size and duration. Number of clusters and bursts of licking within a meal were greater in OLETF rat pups, with no difference between strains in burst and cluster size. Interlick interval (ILI) was not significantly different between OLETF and LETO pups. This measure decreased on days 9-11 compared with days 2-4 in both strains. Latency to start feeding was significantly shorter on days 2-4 in OLETF vs. LETO pups, but this difference disappeared at the second test at the older age. Two- to four-day-old OLETF pups consumed a larger volume of milk during the first minute of feeding, and their initial lick rate and decay of lick rate were significantly larger compared with their LETO controls. Lack of CCK-1 receptors, or other OLETF-related abnormalities, therefore, resulted in a satiation deficit, leading to increased meal size, hyperphagia, and increased weight gain as early as 2-4 postnatal days.
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PMID:Independent ingestion and microstructure of feeding patterns in infant rats lacking CCK-1 receptors. 1609 24

We investigated the interactions of the peripheral satiety peptide cholecystokinin and the brain orexin-A system in the control of food intake. The effect of an intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of sulfated cholecystokinin octapeptide (in this article called CCK) (5 microg/kg, 4.4 nmol/kg) or of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, vehicle control) on 48 h fasting-induced feeding and on orexin-A peptide content was analyzed in diverse brain regions innervated by orexin neurons and involved in the control of food intake. Administration of CCK after a 48 h fast reduced fasting-induced hyperphagia (P<0.05). I.p. CCK increased the orexin-A content in the posterior brainstem of 48 h fasted rats by 35% (P<0.05). Fed animals receiving CCK had 48% higher orexin-A levels in the posterior brainstem than fasted rats (P<0.05). In the lateral hypothalamus, fasting decreased orexin-A levels by 50% as compared to fed rats (P<0.05). In the septal nuclei, the combination of fasting and CCK administration reduced orexin-A contents compared to fed PBS and CCK animals by 13% and 17%, respectively (P<0.05). These results suggest a convergence of pathways activated by peripheral CCK and by fasting on the level of orexin-A released in the posterior brainstem and provide evidence for a novel interaction between peripheral satiety signaling and a brain orexigen in the control of food intake.
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PMID:Effect of intraperitoneal CCK-8 on food intake and brain orexin-A after 48 h of fasting in the rat. 1627 4

Amylin is a pancreatic B-cell hormone that plays an important role in the regulation of nutrient fluxes. As such, amylin reduces food intake in laboratory animals and man, slows gastric emptying and it reduces postprandial glucagon secretion. Amylin deficiency which occurs concomitantly to insulin deficiency in diabetes mellitus, may therefore contribute to some of the major derangements associated with this disorder (hyperphagia, excessive glucagon secretion, accelerated rate of gastric emptying). The described actions of amylin all seem to depend on a direct effect of amylin on the area postrema (AP). As to amylin's satiating effect, the physiological relevance of this action is underlined by studies involving specific amylin antagonists and amylin-deficient mice. In the AP, amylin seems to modulate the anorectic signal elicited by CCK. Subsequent to AP activation, the amylin signal is conveyed to the forebrain via distinct relay stations. Within the lateral hypothalamic area, amylin diminishes the expression of orexigenic neuropeptides such as orexin and MCH. Whether these effects contribute to amylin's short term satiating action remains to be determined. Recent studies suggest that amylin may also play a role as a long-term, lipostatic signal, especially when other feedback systems to the brain are deficient. Obese, leptin-resistant Zucker rats which are hyperinsulinemic and hyperamylinemic, were chronically infused with the amylin antagonist AC 187. AC 187 significantly elevated food intake in obese Zucker rats while having no effect in lean controls. This indicates that at least under certain conditions, chronic blockade of endogenous amylin action may lead to an increase in food intake and/or body weight. As mentioned, the site and mechanism of action for peripheral amylin to reduce food intake seems to be well established. It is less clear how centrally administered amylin reduces food intake although it is well known that 3rd ventricular administration of amylin produces a very strong and long-lasting anorectic action. Amylin receptors have been described in various hypothalamic nuclei but the endogenous ligand of these receptors remains to be investigated. The same holds true as to the physiological relevance of the anorectic effect seen after central amylin administration.
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PMID:Amylinergic control of food intake. 1669 20

Obese CCK-1 receptor-lacking Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima fatty (OLETF) rats are hyperphagic relative to control, nonmutant Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) rats. This study sought to assess whether the overeating observed in OLETF rats is associated with changes in gastric emptying rates or detection of gastric volume. We performed experiments in both 12- and 29-wk-old OLETF and LETO rats to address possible alterations in gastric functions during the development of increased body weight and blood glucose abnormalities in OLETF rats. Gastric emptying of a 5-g solid chow test meal was not significantly different between strains at either 1, 2, or 4 h postmeal. When rats with ad libitum access to chow were tested, there were no significant differences in gastric emptying between strains at any time period despite OLETF rats consuming significantly more chow than LETO rats. Similar to solid food, 5-min gastric emptying of a 5-ml isosmotic and hyperosmotic saline or glucose load was not significantly different between strains. When the stomach was distended with a 15-ml semisolid chow load, there was no significance difference in emptying at either 1 or 2 h. No significant differences in gastric emptying were detected between 12- and 29-wk-old rats under any conditions. Both young and old OLETF rats, however, reduced sham intake significantly less compared with LETO rats during a brief period of gastric distension by 5- or 10-ml balloon inflation. Finally, OLETF rats showed decreased Fos expression in the nucleus of the solitary tract relative to LETO rats after an 8-ml gastric distension. These findings demonstrate that OLETF rats do not express deficits in controlling gastric emptying rates; however, they exhibit decreased behavioral and vagal responsiveness to gastric distension that may contribute to the increased meal size in these animals.
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PMID:Decreased gastric mechanodetection, but preserved gastric emptying, in CCK-1 receptor-deficient OLETF rats. 1672 25


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