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A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents

BACKGROUND: The impact of temporal feeding patterns remains a major unanswered question in nutritional science. Progress has been hampered by the absence of a reliable method to impose temporal feeding in laboratory rodents, without the confounding influence of food-hoarding behavior. OBJECTIVE: The...

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Autores principales: Tilston, Thomas W, Brown, Richard D, Wateridge, Matthew J, Arms-Williams, Bradley, Walker, Jamie J, Sun, Yuxiang, Wells, Timothy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6736427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31287142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxz116
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author Tilston, Thomas W
Brown, Richard D
Wateridge, Matthew J
Arms-Williams, Bradley
Walker, Jamie J
Sun, Yuxiang
Wells, Timothy
author_facet Tilston, Thomas W
Brown, Richard D
Wateridge, Matthew J
Arms-Williams, Bradley
Walker, Jamie J
Sun, Yuxiang
Wells, Timothy
author_sort Tilston, Thomas W
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The impact of temporal feeding patterns remains a major unanswered question in nutritional science. Progress has been hampered by the absence of a reliable method to impose temporal feeding in laboratory rodents, without the confounding influence of food-hoarding behavior. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to develop and validate a reliable method for supplying crushed diets to laboratory rodents in consistent, relevant feeding patterns for prolonged periods. METHODS: We programmed our experimental feeding station to deliver a standard diet [StD; Atwater Fuel Energy (AFE) 13.9% fat] or high-fat diet (HFD; AFE 45% fat) during nocturnal grazing [providing 1/24th of the total daily food intake (tdF/I) of ad libitum–fed controls every 30 min] and meal-fed (3 × 1-h periods of ad libitum feeding) patterns in male rats (Sprague-Dawley: 4 wk old, 72–119 g) and mice [C57/Bl6J wild-type (WT): 6 mo old, 29–37 g], and ghrelin-null littermates (Ghr(−/−); 27–34 g). RESULTS: Grazing yielded accurate, consistent feeding events in rats, with an approximately linear rise in nocturnal cumulative food intake [tdF/I (StD): 97.4 ± 1.5% accurate compared with manual measurement; R(2) = 0.86; tdF/I (HFD): 99.0 ± 1.4% accurate; R(2) = 0.86]. Meal-feeding produced 3 nocturnal meals of equal size and duration in StD-fed rats (tdF/I: 97.4 ± 0.9% accurate; R(2) = 0.90), whereas the second meal size increased progressively in HFD-fed rats (44% higher on day 35 than on day 14; P < 0.01). Importantly, cumulative food intake in grazing and meal-fed rats was identical. Similar results were obtained in WT mice except that less restricted grazing induced hyperphagia (compared with meal-fed WT mice; P < 0.05 from day 1). This difference was abolished in Ghr(−/−) mice, with meal initiation delayed and meal duration enhanced. Neither pattern elevated corticosterone secretion in rats, but meal-feeding aligned ultradian pulses. CONCLUSIONS: We have established a consistent, measurable, researcher-defined, stress-free method for imposing temporal feeding patterns in rats and mice. This approach will facilitate progress in understanding the physiologic impact of feeding patterns.
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spelling pubmed-67364272019-09-16 A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents Tilston, Thomas W Brown, Richard D Wateridge, Matthew J Arms-Williams, Bradley Walker, Jamie J Sun, Yuxiang Wells, Timothy J Nutr Methodology and Mathematical Modeling BACKGROUND: The impact of temporal feeding patterns remains a major unanswered question in nutritional science. Progress has been hampered by the absence of a reliable method to impose temporal feeding in laboratory rodents, without the confounding influence of food-hoarding behavior. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to develop and validate a reliable method for supplying crushed diets to laboratory rodents in consistent, relevant feeding patterns for prolonged periods. METHODS: We programmed our experimental feeding station to deliver a standard diet [StD; Atwater Fuel Energy (AFE) 13.9% fat] or high-fat diet (HFD; AFE 45% fat) during nocturnal grazing [providing 1/24th of the total daily food intake (tdF/I) of ad libitum–fed controls every 30 min] and meal-fed (3 × 1-h periods of ad libitum feeding) patterns in male rats (Sprague-Dawley: 4 wk old, 72–119 g) and mice [C57/Bl6J wild-type (WT): 6 mo old, 29–37 g], and ghrelin-null littermates (Ghr(−/−); 27–34 g). RESULTS: Grazing yielded accurate, consistent feeding events in rats, with an approximately linear rise in nocturnal cumulative food intake [tdF/I (StD): 97.4 ± 1.5% accurate compared with manual measurement; R(2) = 0.86; tdF/I (HFD): 99.0 ± 1.4% accurate; R(2) = 0.86]. Meal-feeding produced 3 nocturnal meals of equal size and duration in StD-fed rats (tdF/I: 97.4 ± 0.9% accurate; R(2) = 0.90), whereas the second meal size increased progressively in HFD-fed rats (44% higher on day 35 than on day 14; P < 0.01). Importantly, cumulative food intake in grazing and meal-fed rats was identical. Similar results were obtained in WT mice except that less restricted grazing induced hyperphagia (compared with meal-fed WT mice; P < 0.05 from day 1). This difference was abolished in Ghr(−/−) mice, with meal initiation delayed and meal duration enhanced. Neither pattern elevated corticosterone secretion in rats, but meal-feeding aligned ultradian pulses. CONCLUSIONS: We have established a consistent, measurable, researcher-defined, stress-free method for imposing temporal feeding patterns in rats and mice. This approach will facilitate progress in understanding the physiologic impact of feeding patterns. Oxford University Press 2019-09 2019-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6736427/ /pubmed/31287142 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxz116 Text en Copyright © American Society for Nutrition 2019. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology and Mathematical Modeling
Tilston, Thomas W
Brown, Richard D
Wateridge, Matthew J
Arms-Williams, Bradley
Walker, Jamie J
Sun, Yuxiang
Wells, Timothy
A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents
title A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents
title_full A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents
title_fullStr A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents
title_full_unstemmed A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents
title_short A Novel Automated System Yields Reproducible Temporal Feeding Patterns in Laboratory Rodents
title_sort novel automated system yields reproducible temporal feeding patterns in laboratory rodents
topic Methodology and Mathematical Modeling
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6736427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31287142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxz116
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