Neuropeptides and anticipatory changes in behaviour and physiology: seasonal body weight regulation in the Siberian hamster

JG Mercer, A Tups - European journal of pharmacology, 2003 - Elsevier
JG Mercer, A Tups
European journal of pharmacology, 2003Elsevier
The Siberian hamster, Phodopus sungorus, is a powerful model of physiological body
weight regulation. This seasonal model offers the potential to distinguish between the
compensatory neuroendocrine systems that defend body weight against imposed negative
energy balance, and those that are involved in the programming of the level of body weight
that will be defended—a seasonally appropriate body weight. Of the known, studied,
components of the hypothalamic energy balance system, the anorexogenic peptide, cocaine …
The Siberian hamster, Phodopus sungorus, is a powerful model of physiological body weight regulation. This seasonal model offers the potential to distinguish between the compensatory neuroendocrine systems that defend body weight against imposed negative energy balance, and those that are involved in the programming of the level of body weight that will be defended—a seasonally appropriate body weight. Of the known, studied, components of the hypothalamic energy balance system, the anorexogenic peptide, cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART), is the only candidate where gene expression changes in a manner consistent with a role in initiating or sustaining photoperiod-induced differences in body weight trajectory. Siberian hamsters effect a reversible biannual switch in leptin sensitivity in which only short day (SD)-acclimated hamsters that have undergone a reduction in body weight, adiposity and plasma leptin are sensitive to peripheral exogenous leptin. The suppressor of cytokine signalling protein, SOCS3, appears to be the molecular correlate of this seasonal sensitivity.
Elsevier
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