Catecholamines and triiodothyronine variations and the calorigenic response to norepinephrine in cold-adapted and exercise-trained rats
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Published:1982-06-01
Issue:6
Volume:60
Page:783-787
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ISSN:0008-4212
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Container-title:Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol.
Author:
LeBlanc J.,Labrie A.,Lupien D.,Richard D.
Abstract
A comparison was made of the thermogenic response to norepinephrine (NE) in cold-adapted (2 h per day at −15 °C for 5 weeks) and in exercise-trained rats (2 h swimming per day for 5 weeks). The oxygen consumption and the plasma catecholamine elevation were comparable for both conditions. Similarly plasma corticosterone determinations indicated comparable elevations in acute stress exposure and reduced responses in both exercise-trained and cold-adapted rats. The marked increase in colonic temperature which was observed in cold-adapted animals injected with NE (30 μg/100 g s.c.) was not found in exercise-trained rats. Similarly the brown adipose tissue was double in size in the cold-adapted rats but remained unchanged with exercise training. An important elevation of triiodothyronine (T3) was found in cold-exposed rats, either adapted or not. However, exercise was found to decrease plasma T3 in trained and nontrained rats. The results indicate that swimming for 2 h and exposure to cold (−15 °C) for 2 h produced comparable elevation of plasma corticosterone and catecholamine, and of oxygen consumption. However, only the cold-adapted animals develop a NE-induced thermogenesis. It is suggested that thyroid hormones are necessary as permissive factor, in stress-induced thermogenesis.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
55 articles.
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