Abstract
Central regulatory mechanisms for food intake regulation vary among animals. Evidence from animal studies suggests central opioids and dopamine have prominent role on appetite regulation but their interaction(s) have not been studied in layer-type chicken. Thus, in this study six experiments designed to investigate intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of SCH23390 (D1 like receptors antagonist), Sulpride (D2 like receptors antagonist), DAMGO (μ-opioid receptors agonist), DPDPE (δ-opioid receptors agonist), U-50488H (κ-opioid receptors agonist) on feeding behavior in 3 h food deprived neonatal layer-type chickens. In experiment 1, chicks ICV injected with control solution, SCH23390 (2.5 nmol), DAMGO (125 pmol) and their combination (SCH23390 + DAMGO). In experiment 2: control solution, SCH23390 (2.5 nmol), DPDPE (δ-opioid receptors agonist, 40 pmol) and SCH23390 + DPDPE were applied to the birds. In experiment 3, injections were control solution, SCH23390 (2.5 nmol), U-50488H (30 nmol) and SCH23390 + U-50488H. In experiments 4–6 were similar to experiments 1–3 except Sulpride (2.5 nmol) applied instead of SCH23390. Then, cumulative food intake was recorded until 120 min after injection. According to the results, ICV injection of DAMGO (125 pmol) significantly decreased food intake but co-injection of DAMGO + SCH23390 diminished DAMGO-induced hypophagia (P 0.05). Furthermore, Sulpride had no role on DAMGO, DPDPE and U-50488H-induced food intake (P > 0.05). These results suggest there is an interaction between opioidergic and dopaminergic systems via μ and D1 receptors in appetite regulation in chicken.
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