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Differential Circadian Eating Patterns in Two Psychogenetically Selected Strains of Rats Fed Low-, Medium-, and High-Fat Diets
Authors:Rinaldo Rossi  Peter Driscoll  Wolfgang Langhans
Affiliation:(1) Institute for Animal Sciences, Group of Physiology and Animal Husbandry, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland;(2) Present address: Institute of Veterinary Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;(3) Physiologie und Tierhaltung, ETH-Zentrum, Institut für Nutztierwissenschaften, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract:Spontaneous eating patterns in male, inbred Roman high- and low-avoidance rats (RHA/Verh, RLA/Verh) were continuously recorded while animals were successively offered three isocaloric (asymp16.5-kJ/g) diets: a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet (LF; 3.3% fat), a medium-fat diet (MF; 18% fat), and a high-fat diet (HF; 40% fat), the latter being followed once again by the LF diet. Under the conditions of this experiment, overall 24h food intake did not differ significantly between RHA/Verh and RLA/Verh rats, but was significantly higher for both rat strains on the MF and HF diets than on the LF diet. Despite the similar 24h-food intake, RHA/Verh rats ate transiently less than RLA/Verh rats during the third quarter of the dark phase under all dietary conditions. These differences were due to the RHA/Verh rats' longer intermeal intervals (with all diets) and smaller meals (with the MF and HF diets) and were compensated for during the last 3 h of the dark phase. On the LF diet, dark-phase meal frequency was higher and both nocturnal meal size and mean eating rate within meals were lower in RLA/Verh rats than in RHA/Verh rats. With the MF and HF diets, mean nocturnal meal size and meal duration were higher and mean eating rate was lower in RLA/Verh rats than in RHA/Verh rats. For both strains, nocturnal meal size was significantly higher with the MF and HF diets than with the LF diet, and nocturnal meal frequency was lower with the HF diet than with the other two diets. Although body weights were similar at the start of the study, RLA/Verh rats gained significantly more weight than did RHA/Verh rats by the end. As has often been the case with other aspects of behavior studied, differences in neuromodulatory systems (e.g., serotoninergic and dopaminergic) between RHA/Verh and RLA/Verh rats may directly or indirectly contribute to the subtle differences in eating patterns observed here.
Keywords:RHA/Verh and RLA/Verh rats  serotonin  dopamine  regulation of food intake
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