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1 School of Psychology and
3 Department of Cellular and
Molecular Medicine,
Bombesin
(BN) suppresses food intake in rats whether given centrally or
systemically. Although the brain BN-sensitive receptors are known to be
essential for the anorexic effect of systemic BN, the mode of
communication between the gut and the brain remains unclear. This study
assessed whether the anorexic effect of systemic BN is mediated
humorally or via neural circuits. Afferent neurons were lesioned using
capsaicin (50 mg/kg sc) on postnatal
day
2, and responses to BN were assessed
during adulthood. Capsaicin treatment decreased body weight gain
significantly from postnatal age 4-7 wk. Peripheral BN (4-16
µg/kg ip) dose dependently suppressed food intake in control animals.
However, this effect was completely blocked in capsaicin-treated rats.
In contrast to systemic effects, feeding-suppressant effects of
centrally administered BN (0.01-0.5 µg icv) were not affected by
capsaicin treatment. This research suggests that peripheral BN
communicates with the brain via a neuronal system(s) whose afferent arm
is constituted of capsaicin-sensitive C and/or A
-fibers, whereas the
efferent arm of this satiety- and/or anorexia-mediating circuitry is
capsaicin resistant.
gut-brain axis; gastrin-releasing peptide; satiety
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P. Kobelt, M. Goebel, A. Stengel, M. Schmidtmann, I. R. van der Voort, J. J. Tebbe, R. W. Veh, B. F. Klapp, B. Wiedenmann, L. Wang, et al. Bombesin, but not amylin, blocks the orexigenic effect of peripheral ghrelin Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, October 1, 2006; 291(4): R903 - R913. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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