4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Intermittent, extended access to preferred food leads to escalated food reinforcement and cyclic whole-body metabolism in rats: Sex differences and individual vulnerability

Journal

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 192, Issue -, Pages 3-16

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.04.001

Keywords

Food addiction OR addictive eating OR eating addiction; Fixed-ratio and progressive ratio schedules of food operant self-administration; Compulsive eating OR compulsivity; Respiratory exchange ratio OR respiratory quotient OR RER; Energy expenditure OR heat; Overweight OR obesity OR adiposity OR body composition OR body fat OR body weight

Funding

  1. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism of the National Institutes of Health [P60 AA06420]
  2. Pearson Center for Alcoholism and Addiction Research
  3. NIH/NIAAA Institutional Training Grant [T32 AA007456]
  4. National Institutes of Health Clinical Translational Science Award (NIH CTSA) [TL1 TR001113]
  5. NIH-funded UCSD MSTP Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) Training Program [R25 HL084692]

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Compulsive binge eating is a hallmark of binge eating disorder and bulimia nervosa and is implicated in some obesity cases. Eating disorders are sexually dimorphic, with females more often affected than males. Animal models of binge-like eating based on intermittent access to palatable food exist; but, little is known regarding sex differences or individual vulnerability in these models with respect to the reinforcing efficacy of food, the development of compulsive-and binge-like eating, or associated changes in whole-body metabolism or body composition. Adolescent male (n = 24) and female (n = 32) Wistar rats were maintained on chow or a preferred, high-sucrose, chocolate-flavored diet in continuous or intermittent, extended access conditions. Body weight and composition, intake, fixed-and progressive-ratio operant self-administration, and whole body energy expenditure and respiratory exchange ratios were measured across an 11-week study period. Subgroup analyses were conducted to differentiate compulsive-like high responder intermittent access rats that escalated to extreme progressive-ratio self-administration performance vs. more resistant low responders. Female rats had greater reinforcing efficacy of food than males in all diet conditions and were more often classified as high responders. In both sexes, rats with intermittent access showed cycling of fuel substrate utilization and whole body energy expenditure. Further, high-responding intermittent access female rats had especially elevated respiratory exchange ratios, indicating a fat-sparing phenotype. Future studies are needed to better understand the molecular and neurobiological basis of the sex and individual differences we have observed in rats and their translational impact for humans with compulsive, binge eating disorders.

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