Cargando…

Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet

Information regarding the early effects of obesogenic diets on feeding patterns and behaviors is limited. To improve knowledge regarding the etiology of obesity, young male Wistar rats were submitted to high-fat (HFD) or regular chow diets (RCDs) for 14 days. Various metabolic parameters were contin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Andrich, David E., Melbouci, Lilya, Ou, Ya, Leduc-Gaudet, Jean-Philippe, Chabot, François, Lalonde, François, Lira, Fábio Santos, Gaylinn, Bruce D., Gouspillou, Gilles, Danialou, Gawiyou, Comtois, Alain-Steve, St-Pierre, David H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5901484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29805802
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/1498150
_version_ 1783314622598610944
author Andrich, David E.
Melbouci, Lilya
Ou, Ya
Leduc-Gaudet, Jean-Philippe
Chabot, François
Lalonde, François
Lira, Fábio Santos
Gaylinn, Bruce D.
Gouspillou, Gilles
Danialou, Gawiyou
Comtois, Alain-Steve
St-Pierre, David H.
author_facet Andrich, David E.
Melbouci, Lilya
Ou, Ya
Leduc-Gaudet, Jean-Philippe
Chabot, François
Lalonde, François
Lira, Fábio Santos
Gaylinn, Bruce D.
Gouspillou, Gilles
Danialou, Gawiyou
Comtois, Alain-Steve
St-Pierre, David H.
author_sort Andrich, David E.
collection PubMed
description Information regarding the early effects of obesogenic diets on feeding patterns and behaviors is limited. To improve knowledge regarding the etiology of obesity, young male Wistar rats were submitted to high-fat (HFD) or regular chow diets (RCDs) for 14 days. Various metabolic parameters were continuously measured using metabolic chambers. Total weight gain was similar between groups, but heavier visceral fat depots and reduced weight of livers were found in HFD rats. Total calorie intake was increased while individual feeding bouts were shorter and of higher calorie intake in response to HFD. Ambulatory activity and sleep duration were decreased in HFD rats during passive and active phase, respectively. Acylated and unacylated ghrelin levels were unaltered by the increased calorie intake and the early changes in body composition. This indicates that at this early stage, the orexigenic signal did not adapt to the high-calorie content of HFD. We hereby demonstrate that, although total weight gain is not affected, a short-term obesogenic diet alters body composition, feeding patterns, satiation, ambulatory activity profiles, and behaviours in a young rat model. Moreover, this effect precedes changes in weight gain, obesity, and ensuing metabolic disorders.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5901484
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Hindawi
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-59014842018-05-27 Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet Andrich, David E. Melbouci, Lilya Ou, Ya Leduc-Gaudet, Jean-Philippe Chabot, François Lalonde, François Lira, Fábio Santos Gaylinn, Bruce D. Gouspillou, Gilles Danialou, Gawiyou Comtois, Alain-Steve St-Pierre, David H. J Nutr Metab Research Article Information regarding the early effects of obesogenic diets on feeding patterns and behaviors is limited. To improve knowledge regarding the etiology of obesity, young male Wistar rats were submitted to high-fat (HFD) or regular chow diets (RCDs) for 14 days. Various metabolic parameters were continuously measured using metabolic chambers. Total weight gain was similar between groups, but heavier visceral fat depots and reduced weight of livers were found in HFD rats. Total calorie intake was increased while individual feeding bouts were shorter and of higher calorie intake in response to HFD. Ambulatory activity and sleep duration were decreased in HFD rats during passive and active phase, respectively. Acylated and unacylated ghrelin levels were unaltered by the increased calorie intake and the early changes in body composition. This indicates that at this early stage, the orexigenic signal did not adapt to the high-calorie content of HFD. We hereby demonstrate that, although total weight gain is not affected, a short-term obesogenic diet alters body composition, feeding patterns, satiation, ambulatory activity profiles, and behaviours in a young rat model. Moreover, this effect precedes changes in weight gain, obesity, and ensuing metabolic disorders. Hindawi 2018-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5901484/ /pubmed/29805802 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/1498150 Text en Copyright © 2018 David E. Andrich et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Andrich, David E.
Melbouci, Lilya
Ou, Ya
Leduc-Gaudet, Jean-Philippe
Chabot, François
Lalonde, François
Lira, Fábio Santos
Gaylinn, Bruce D.
Gouspillou, Gilles
Danialou, Gawiyou
Comtois, Alain-Steve
St-Pierre, David H.
Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet
title Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet
title_full Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet
title_fullStr Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet
title_full_unstemmed Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet
title_short Altered Feeding Behaviors and Adiposity Precede Observable Weight Gain in Young Rats Submitted to a Short-Term High-Fat Diet
title_sort altered feeding behaviors and adiposity precede observable weight gain in young rats submitted to a short-term high-fat diet
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5901484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29805802
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/1498150
work_keys_str_mv AT andrichdavide alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT melboucililya alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT ouya alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT leducgaudetjeanphilippe alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT chabotfrancois alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT lalondefrancois alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT lirafabiosantos alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT gaylinnbruced alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT gouspillougilles alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT danialougawiyou alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT comtoisalainsteve alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet
AT stpierredavidh alteredfeedingbehaviorsandadiposityprecedeobservableweightgaininyoungratssubmittedtoashorttermhighfatdiet