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Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice

CD36 is a ubiquitous membrane glycoprotein that binds long-chain fatty acids. The presence of a functional CD36 is required for the induction of satiety by a lipid load and its role as a lipid receptor driving cellular signal has recently been demonstrated. Our project aimed to further explore the r...

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Autores principales: Naville, Danielle, Duchampt, Adeline, Vigier, Michèle, Oursel, Delphine, Lessire, René, Poirier, Hélène, Niot, Isabelle, Bégeot, Martine, Besnard, Philippe, Mithieux, Gilles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3266275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22295104
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030686
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author Naville, Danielle
Duchampt, Adeline
Vigier, Michèle
Oursel, Delphine
Lessire, René
Poirier, Hélène
Niot, Isabelle
Bégeot, Martine
Besnard, Philippe
Mithieux, Gilles
author_facet Naville, Danielle
Duchampt, Adeline
Vigier, Michèle
Oursel, Delphine
Lessire, René
Poirier, Hélène
Niot, Isabelle
Bégeot, Martine
Besnard, Philippe
Mithieux, Gilles
author_sort Naville, Danielle
collection PubMed
description CD36 is a ubiquitous membrane glycoprotein that binds long-chain fatty acids. The presence of a functional CD36 is required for the induction of satiety by a lipid load and its role as a lipid receptor driving cellular signal has recently been demonstrated. Our project aimed to further explore the role of intestinal CD36 in the regulation of food intake. Duodenal infusions of vehicle or sulfo-N-succinimidyl-oleate (SSO) was performed prior to acute infusions of saline or Intralipid (IL) in mice. Infusion of minute quantities of IL induced a decrease in food intake (FI) compared to saline. Infusion of SSO had the same effect but no additive inhibitory effect was observed in presence of IL. No IL- or SSO-mediated satiety occurred in CD36-null mice. To determine whether the CD36-mediated hypophagic effect of lipids was maintained in animals fed a satietogen diet, mice were subjected to a High-Protein diet (HPD). Concomitantly with the satiety effect, a rise in intestinal CD36 gene expression was observed. No satiety effect occurred in CD36-null mice. HPD-fed WT mice showed a diminished FI compared to control mice, after saline duodenal infusion. But there was no further decrease after lipid infusion. The lipid-induced decrease in FI observed on control mice was accompanied by a rise in jejunal oleylethanolamide (OEA). Its level was higher in HPD-fed mice than in controls after saline infusion and was not changed by lipids. Overall, we demonstrate that lipid binding to intestinal CD36 is sufficient to produce a satiety effect. Moreover, it could participate in the satiety effect induced by HPD. Intestine can modulate FI by several mechanisms including an increase in OEA production and CD36 gene expression. Furthermore, intestine of mice adapted to HPD have a diminished capacity to modulate their food intake in response to dietary lipids.
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spelling pubmed-32662752012-01-31 Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice Naville, Danielle Duchampt, Adeline Vigier, Michèle Oursel, Delphine Lessire, René Poirier, Hélène Niot, Isabelle Bégeot, Martine Besnard, Philippe Mithieux, Gilles PLoS One Research Article CD36 is a ubiquitous membrane glycoprotein that binds long-chain fatty acids. The presence of a functional CD36 is required for the induction of satiety by a lipid load and its role as a lipid receptor driving cellular signal has recently been demonstrated. Our project aimed to further explore the role of intestinal CD36 in the regulation of food intake. Duodenal infusions of vehicle or sulfo-N-succinimidyl-oleate (SSO) was performed prior to acute infusions of saline or Intralipid (IL) in mice. Infusion of minute quantities of IL induced a decrease in food intake (FI) compared to saline. Infusion of SSO had the same effect but no additive inhibitory effect was observed in presence of IL. No IL- or SSO-mediated satiety occurred in CD36-null mice. To determine whether the CD36-mediated hypophagic effect of lipids was maintained in animals fed a satietogen diet, mice were subjected to a High-Protein diet (HPD). Concomitantly with the satiety effect, a rise in intestinal CD36 gene expression was observed. No satiety effect occurred in CD36-null mice. HPD-fed WT mice showed a diminished FI compared to control mice, after saline duodenal infusion. But there was no further decrease after lipid infusion. The lipid-induced decrease in FI observed on control mice was accompanied by a rise in jejunal oleylethanolamide (OEA). Its level was higher in HPD-fed mice than in controls after saline infusion and was not changed by lipids. Overall, we demonstrate that lipid binding to intestinal CD36 is sufficient to produce a satiety effect. Moreover, it could participate in the satiety effect induced by HPD. Intestine can modulate FI by several mechanisms including an increase in OEA production and CD36 gene expression. Furthermore, intestine of mice adapted to HPD have a diminished capacity to modulate their food intake in response to dietary lipids. Public Library of Science 2012-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3266275/ /pubmed/22295104 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030686 Text en Naville et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Naville, Danielle
Duchampt, Adeline
Vigier, Michèle
Oursel, Delphine
Lessire, René
Poirier, Hélène
Niot, Isabelle
Bégeot, Martine
Besnard, Philippe
Mithieux, Gilles
Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice
title Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice
title_full Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice
title_fullStr Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice
title_full_unstemmed Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice
title_short Link between Intestinal CD36 Ligand Binding and Satiety Induced by a High Protein Diet in Mice
title_sort link between intestinal cd36 ligand binding and satiety induced by a high protein diet in mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3266275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22295104
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030686
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