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MTII attenuates ghrelin- and food deprivation-induced increases in food hoarding and food intake
Institution:1. Research Center, Montreal Heart Institute, 5000 Bélanger, Montréal, Québec H1T 1C8, Canada;2. Faculty of Pharmacy, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada;3. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada;1. Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655, United States;2. Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Montréal, 3875 St. Urbain, 1st Floor, Montreal, Quebec, H2W 1V1, Canada;3. Centre de Recherche du Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal, Tour St-Antoine, 850 St-Denis, Montreal, Quebec, H2X 0A9, Canada;1. Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655, USA;2. RAND Health, RAND Corporation, 20 Park Plaza, Suite 920, Boston, MA 02116, USA
Abstract:Food deprivation triggers a constellation of physiological and behavioral changes including increases in peripherally-produced ghrelin and centrally-produced agouti-related protein (AgRP). Upon refeeding, food intake is increased in most species, however hamsters primarily increase food hoarding. Food deprivation-induced increases in food hoarding by Siberian hamsters are mimicked by peripheral ghrelin and central AgRP injections. Because food deprivation stimulates ghrelin as well as AgRP synthesis/release, food deprivation-induced increases in hoarding may be mediated by melanocortin 3 or 4 receptor (MC3/4-R) antagonism via AgRP, the MC3/4-R inverse agonist. Therefore, we asked: Can a MC3/4-R agonist block food deprivation- or ghrelin-induced increases in foraging, food hoarding and food intake? This was accomplished by injecting melanotan II (MTII), a synthetic MC3/4-R agonist, into the 3rd ventricle in food deprived, fed or peripheral ghrelin injected hamsters and housed in a running wheel-based food delivery foraging system. Three foraging conditions were used: a) no running wheel access, non-contingent food, b) running wheel access, non-contingent food or c) a foraging requirement for food (10 revolutions/pellet). Food deprivation was a more potent stimulator of foraging and hoarding than ghrelin. Concurrent injections of MTII completely blocked food deprivation- and ghrelin-induced increases in food intake and attenuated, but did not always completely block, food deprivation- and ghrelin-induced increases in food hoarding. Collectively, these data suggest that the MC3/4-R are involved in ghrelin- and food deprivation-induced increases in food intake, but other neurochemical systems, such as previously demonstrated with neuropeptide Y, also are involved in increases in food hoarding as well as foraging.
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