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Title: Nitric oxide mediates hyperphagia of obese Zucker rats: relation to specific changes in the microstructure of feeding behavior. Author: Stricker-Krongrad A, Beck B, Burlet C. Journal: Life Sci; 1996; 58(1):PL9-15. PubMed ID: 8628105. Abstract: The presence of a nitric oxide synthetase (NOS) was demonstrated in the rat brain. It has been demonstrated recently that NOS-inhibitors reduce food intake in mammals and this suggest that nitric oxide (NO) might be a physiological mediator involved in the mechanisms controlling feeding behavior. Actually, there is no information about the acute central and peripheral effects of NOS-inhibitors on feeding behavior in obese and lean Zucker rats. That is why we investigated the acute dose-dependent activity of NG-Nitro-Arginine-Methyl-Ester (L-NAME) on food intake and feeding behavior in these rats. When given peripherally in the obese rats, L-NAME produced a dose-dependent decrease in food intake (p<0.001). The calculated MED and the ED 50 were 0.50 mg/kg IP and 3.46 mg/kg IP, respectively. These effects could not be reproduced in the lean Zucker rats whatever the dose used (p=0.59). The anorectic properties of L-NAME were very well translated into the microstructure of the feeding behavior. Time spent to eat (p<0.001), meal duration (p<0.01) and meal number (p<0.01) were reduced in the obese rats. Interestingly, L-NAME produced the same effects in the lean rats, but meal size increased in a compensatory manner. Central administration of L-NAME reproduced the same effects in the obese rats, but lean rats still remained insensitive. Central aminergic and/or peptidergic defects associated with the expression of hyperphagia might explain the differences observed between these lean and the obese animals. These results indicate a role of nitric oxide in the expression of hyperphagia and show that it might be a physiological mediator involved in the mechanisms controlling feeding behavior.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]