Abstract

Zucker weanling obese rat meal size is greater than in lean litter-mates by 4 weeks of age, indicating a possible decreased sensitivity to satiety signals. Adult Zucker obese rats are less sensitive to the putative satiety signal octapeptide of cholecystokinin (OP-CCK) when injected after a normal intermeal interval. In these experiments were compared responses of Zucker lean and obese rats from 3–11 weeks of age to OP-CCK and bombesin (BBS), another recently reported putative satiety agent. Injection of 2.0 and 4.0 μg/kg OP-CCK in 4–5 week olds had no effect on food intake of obese rats while decreasing 60-min food intake in lean rats 29 and 28 percent, respectively. However, 8.0 μg/kg OP-CCK decreased food intake of obese and lean rats similarly, indicating decreased, rather than lack of, sensitivity in the obese. The doses of 2.0 and 4.0 μg/kg BBS decreased food intake similarly in the obese and lean rats, but 1.0 μg/kg, although having no effect in lean rats, increased food intake in obese rats approximately 17 percent. Thus, while Zucker obese weanling rats appear to be less sensitive to OP-CCK, shown to decrease food intake in lean rats, they appear to be equally sensitive to the satiety effect of similar doses of BBS, but at low doses BBS stimulated food intake in obese but not lean rats.

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