4.5 Article

Effects of CB1 and CRF1 receptor antagonists on binge-like eating in rats with limited access to a sweet fat diet: Lack of withdrawal-like responses

期刊

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
卷 107, 期 2, 页码 231-242

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2012.06.017

关键词

Binge eating; Palatable food intake; Sucrose or sugar or fat or food addiction; Obesity; Withdrawal anxiety; Corticotropin-releasing factor or corticotropin-releasing hormone or CRF or CRH; Endocannabinoid or cannabinoid type 1 receptor; Surinabant or rimonabant

资金

  1. Pearson Center for Alcoholism and Addiction Research
  2. Harold L Dorris Neurological Research Institute
  3. NIH [DK070118, DK076896, DA023680, DA026690, 1T32NS061847]
  4. Intramural Research Programs of the National Institute on Drug Abuse
  5. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Positive reinforcement (e.g., appetitive, rewarding properties) has often been hypothesized to maintain excessive intake of palatable foods. Recently, rats receiving intermittent access to high sucrose diets showed binge-like intake with withdrawal-like signs upon cessation of access, suggesting negative reinforcement mechanisms contribute as well. Whether intermittent access to high fat diets also produces withdrawal-like syndromes is controversial. The present study therefore tested the hypothesis that binge-like eating and withdrawal-like anxiety would arise in a novel model of binge eating based on daily 10-min access to a sweet fat diet (35% fat kcal, 31% sucrose kcal). Within 2-3 weeks, female Wistar rats developed binge-like intake comparable to levels seen previously for high sucrose diets (similar to 40% of daily caloric intake within 10 min) plus excess weight gain and adiposity, but absent increased anxiety-like behavior during elevated plus-maze or defensive withdrawal tests after diet withdrawal. Binge-like intake was unaffected by pretreatment with the corticotropin-releasing factor type 1 (CRF1) receptor antagonist R121919, and corticosterone responses to restraint stress did not differ between sweet-fat binge rats and chow-fed controls. In contrast, pretreatment with the cannabinoid type 1 (CB1) receptor antagonist SR147778 dose-dependently reduced binge-like intake, albeit less effectively than in ad lib chow or sweet fat controls. A priming dose of the sweet fat diet did not precipitate increased anxiety-like behavior, but rather increased plus-maze locomotor activity. The results suggest that CB1-dependent positive reinforcement rather than CRFI-dependent negative reinforcement mechanisms predominantly maintain excessive intake in this limited access model of sweet-fat diet binges. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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