Abstract

Noradrenergic pathways have been implicated in eating pathologies. These experiments sought to examine how dietary-induced binge eating influences the neuronal activity of the locus coeruleus (LC)-norepinephrine (NE) system. Young adult female Sprague Dawley rats (7–8 weeks old) were exposed to a repeated intermittent (twice weekly) cycle of 30-min access to a highly palatable sweetened fat (i.e., vegetable shortening with 10% sucrose) with or without intermittent (24 h) calorie restriction (Restrict Binge or Binge groups, respectively). Age- and weight-matched female control rats were exposed to standard chow feeding (Naive group) or intermittent chow feeding (Restrict group). The Binge and Restrict Binge groups demonstrated an escalation in sweet-fat food intake after 2.5 weeks. On week 3, in vivo single-unit LC electrophysiological activity was recorded under isoflurane anesthesia. Restrict Binge (20 cells from six rats) and Binge (27 cells from six rats) had significantly reduced (approximate 20% and 26%, respectively) evoked LC discharge rates compared with naive rats (22 cells, seven rats). Spontaneous and tonic discharge rates were not different among the groups. Signal-to-noise ratio was reduced in the groups with intermittent sweetened fat exposure. In order to investigate the neuropeptide alterations as a consequence of dietary binge eating, relative gene expression of neuropeptide Y (NPY), glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor (GLP-1r), prodynorphin, and related genes were measured in LC and hypothalamic arcuate (Arc) regions. Glp-1r, Npy2r, and Pdyn in LC region were reduced with repeated intermittent restriction. Npy1r was reduced by approximately 27% in ARC of Restrict compared with Naive group. Such data indicate that dietary-induced binge eating alters the neural response of LC neurons to sensory stimuli and dampens the neural stress response.

Highlights

  • Binge eating is an eating pathology characterized by a sense of a “loss of control” over eating accompanied by recurrent overeating episodes (American Psychiatric Association, 2013)

  • Our findings indicated that female rats exposed to twice weekly intermittent 30-min access to sweetened fat displayed an overeating response that increased over the 2.5 weeks period

  • In both the Restrict Binge and Binge groups we observed reduced sensory-evoked locus coeruleus (LC) neural activity compared with the Naive group

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Binge eating is an eating pathology characterized by a sense of a “loss of control” over eating accompanied by recurrent overeating episodes (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). The central noradrenergic pathways on binge eating behaviors have not been well-characterized. The central noradrenergic pathways have been implicated in other physiological processes not directly related to stress control, such as attention and nociception, that could influence eating pathologies (Conti et al, 1997; Aston-Jones et al, 2000; Berridge and Waterhouse, 2003; Ramos and Arnsten, 2007; Valentino and Van Bockstaele, 2008; Taylor and Westlund, 2017; Hayashida and Eisenach, 2018)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call