Abstract

The effects of electrolytic lesions in the hypothalamus paraventricular nucleus were studied in adult male and female Sprague-Dawley rats, fed different diets, consisting of either palatable human food plus chow (cafeteria diet) or chow alone. The results showed that both cafeteria diet and lesions induced an increase in energy intake and weight gain in rats of both sexes. Oxygen consumption rate and colonic temperature were significantly decreased by lesions, while cafeteria diet increased the same parameters only in intact animals. The lesion decreased weight, protein and DNA, and temperature of brown adipose tissue, while cafeteria diet increased the values considered in brown adipose tissue of sham-injured rats, but not in lesioned animals. The response to norepinephrine administration was significantly greater in intact rats and those fed cafeteria diet. The results suggest that the larger body weight gain observed in lesioned rats, particularly evident in rats fed cafeteria diet, is partly due to the disappearance of diet-induced thermogenesis that depends on the reduced mass and functional activity of brown adipose tissue.

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