Contrasting effects of different levels of food intake and adiposity on LH secretion and hypothalamic gene expression in sheep

Body reserves (long-term) and food intake (short-term) both contribute nutritional feedback to the hypothalamus. Reproductive neuroendocrine output (GnRH/LH) is stimulated by increased food intake and not by high adiposity in sheep, but it is unknown whether appetite-regulating hypothalamic neurons...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of endocrinology 2002-11, Vol.175 (2), p.383-393
Hauptverfasser: Archer, ZA, Rhind, SM, Findlay, PA, Kyle, CE, Thomas, L, Marie, M, Adam, CL
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Body reserves (long-term) and food intake (short-term) both contribute nutritional feedback to the hypothalamus. Reproductive neuroendocrine output (GnRH/LH) is stimulated by increased food intake and not by high adiposity in sheep, but it is unknown whether appetite-regulating hypothalamic neurons show this differential response. Castrated male sheep (Scottish Blackface) with oestradiol implants were studied in two 4 week experiments. In Experiment 1, sheep were fed to maintain the initial body condition (BC) score of 2.0+/-0.00 (lower BC (LBC), n=7) or 2.9+/-0.09 (higher BC (HBC), n=9), and liveweight of 43+/-1.1 and 59+/-1.6 kg respectively. LBC and HBC sheep had similar mean plasma LH concentration, pulse frequency and amplitude, but HBC animals had higher mean plasma concentrations of insulin (P
ISSN:0022-0795
1479-6805
DOI:10.1677/joe.0.1750383