Unimpaired thermogenic response to noradrenaline in genetic (ob/ob) and hypothalamic (MSG) obese mice

Author:

Duloo A. G.1,Miller D. S.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition, Queen Elizabeth College, University of London, Campden Hill Road, London W8 7AH, UK

Abstract

The thermogenic response to noradrenaline administration was investigated at 25° in two models of obese mice (genetic ob/ob obesity of the ‘QEC’ strain and monosodium-glutamate-induced obesity) and in their respective lean littermates. Subcutaneous injections of a low dose of noradrenaline (I00 μg/kg body wt.) eJevated metabolic rate by about 3096 in both obese models but not in their respective lean counterparts. In contrast, the increase in metabolic rate after injections of a high dose of noradrenaline (600 μg/kg body wt.) was of a similar magnitude in both lean and obese animals: metabolic rate was increased by 70–80%. These results indicate that the overall whole body thermogenic capacity is unimpaired at room temperature in this ‘QEC’ strain of ob/ob mice and in the hypothalamic damaged obese mice. Obesity in these models is therefore not associated with a reduced ability to respond to noradrenaline but could rather be due to a failure to release noradrenaline.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Biophysics

Reference21 articles.

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2. Arch JRS, Ainsworth AT & Cawthorne MA (1982) Thermogenic and anorectic effects of ephedrine and congeners in mice and rats. Life Sci.30, 1817?1826.

3. Boroumand M (1977) Nutrition and genetics: A study of obesity and leanness in the rat. PhD thesis, London University.

4. Bray GA & York DA (1979) Hypothalamic and genetic obesity in experimental animals: An autonomic and endocrine hypothesis. Physiol. Rev.59, 719?809.

5. Davis TRA & Mayer J (1954) Imperfect homeothermia in the hereditary obese-hyperglycaemic syndrome of mice. Am. J. Physiol.177, 222?226.

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