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Normal feeding and body weight in Fischer 344 rats lacking the cholecystokinin-1 receptor gene

Blevins, J. E. ; Overduin, J. ; Fuller, Jessica LU ; Cummings, D. E. ; Matsumoto, K. and Moralejo, D. H. (2009) In Brain Research 1255. p.98-112
Abstract
A large body of evidence has demonstrated that one mechanism by which cholecystokinin (CCK) inhibits food intake through activation of CCK1 receptors (CCK1R) on vagal afferent neurons that innervate the gastrointestinal tract and project to the hindbrain. OLETF rats, which carry a spontaneous null mutation of the CCK1R, are hyperphagic, obese, and predisposed to type 2 diabetes. Recently, by introgressing the OLETF-derived, CCK1R-null gene onto a Fischer 344 genetic background, we have been able to generate a CCK1R-deficient, congenic rat strain, F344.Cck1r(-/-), that in contrast to OLETF rats, possesses a lean and normoglycemic phenotype. In the present study, the behavioral and neurobiological phenotype of this rat strain was... (More)
A large body of evidence has demonstrated that one mechanism by which cholecystokinin (CCK) inhibits food intake through activation of CCK1 receptors (CCK1R) on vagal afferent neurons that innervate the gastrointestinal tract and project to the hindbrain. OLETF rats, which carry a spontaneous null mutation of the CCK1R, are hyperphagic, obese, and predisposed to type 2 diabetes. Recently, by introgressing the OLETF-derived, CCK1R-null gene onto a Fischer 344 genetic background, we have been able to generate a CCK1R-deficient, congenic rat strain, F344.Cck1r(-/-), that in contrast to OLETF rats, possesses a lean and normoglycemic phenotype. In the present study, the behavioral and neurobiological phenotype of this rat strain was characterized more fully. As expected, intraperitoneal injections of CCK-8 inhibited intake of chow and Ensure Plus and induced Fos responses in the area postrema and the gelatinosus, commissural and medial subdivisions of the nucleus tractus solitarius of wild-type F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats, whereas CCK-8 was without effect on food intake or Fos induction in the F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats. F344.Cck1r(-/-) and F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats did not differ in body weight and showed comparable weight gain when maintained on Ensure Plus for 2 weeks. Also, no difference was found in 24-h food intake, and dark-phase meal frequency or meal size between F344.Cck1r(-/-) and F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats. As expected, blockade of endogenous CCK action at CCK1R increased food intake and blocked the effects of peripheral CCK-8 in wild-type F344.Cck1r(+/+) rats. These results confirm that in rats with a F344 background, CCK-1R mediates CCK-8-induced inhibition of food intake and Fos activation in the hindbrain and demonstrate that selective genetic ablation of CCK1R is not associated with altered meal patterns, hyperphagia, or excessive weight gain on a palatable diet. Published by Elsevier B.V. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Meal size, CCK1 receptor, Cholecystokinin, Satiety
in
Brain Research
volume
1255
pages
98 - 112
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • wos:000263777500011
  • scopus:58949084443
  • pmid:19111529
ISSN
1872-6240
DOI
10.1016/j.brainres.2008.12.015
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
822f9f31-20a4-448b-91a3-a860d6fe3909 (old id 1371970)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:35:54
date last changed
2022-01-27 07:17:20
@article{822f9f31-20a4-448b-91a3-a860d6fe3909,
  abstract     = {{A large body of evidence has demonstrated that one mechanism by which cholecystokinin (CCK) inhibits food intake through activation of CCK1 receptors (CCK1R) on vagal afferent neurons that innervate the gastrointestinal tract and project to the hindbrain. OLETF rats, which carry a spontaneous null mutation of the CCK1R, are hyperphagic, obese, and predisposed to type 2 diabetes. Recently, by introgressing the OLETF-derived, CCK1R-null gene onto a Fischer 344 genetic background, we have been able to generate a CCK1R-deficient, congenic rat strain, F344.Cck1r(-/-), that in contrast to OLETF rats, possesses a lean and normoglycemic phenotype. In the present study, the behavioral and neurobiological phenotype of this rat strain was characterized more fully. As expected, intraperitoneal injections of CCK-8 inhibited intake of chow and Ensure Plus and induced Fos responses in the area postrema and the gelatinosus, commissural and medial subdivisions of the nucleus tractus solitarius of wild-type F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats, whereas CCK-8 was without effect on food intake or Fos induction in the F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats. F344.Cck1r(-/-) and F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats did not differ in body weight and showed comparable weight gain when maintained on Ensure Plus for 2 weeks. Also, no difference was found in 24-h food intake, and dark-phase meal frequency or meal size between F344.Cck1r(-/-) and F344.Cck1r(-/-) rats. As expected, blockade of endogenous CCK action at CCK1R increased food intake and blocked the effects of peripheral CCK-8 in wild-type F344.Cck1r(+/+) rats. These results confirm that in rats with a F344 background, CCK-1R mediates CCK-8-induced inhibition of food intake and Fos activation in the hindbrain and demonstrate that selective genetic ablation of CCK1R is not associated with altered meal patterns, hyperphagia, or excessive weight gain on a palatable diet. Published by Elsevier B.V.}},
  author       = {{Blevins, J. E. and Overduin, J. and Fuller, Jessica and Cummings, D. E. and Matsumoto, K. and Moralejo, D. H.}},
  issn         = {{1872-6240}},
  keywords     = {{Meal size; CCK1 receptor; Cholecystokinin; Satiety}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{98--112}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Brain Research}},
  title        = {{Normal feeding and body weight in Fischer 344 rats lacking the cholecystokinin-1 receptor gene}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2008.12.015}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.brainres.2008.12.015}},
  volume       = {{1255}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}