Obesity-prone high-fat-fed rats reduce caloric intake and adiposity and gain more fat-free mass when allowed to self-select protein from carbohydrate:fat intake

Author:

Azzout-Marniche Dalila1,Chalvon-Demersay Tristan1,Pimentel Grégory1,Chaumontet Catherine1,Nadkarni Nachiket A.1,Piedcoq Julien1,Fromentin Gilles1,Tomé Daniel1,Gaudichon Claire1,Even Patrick C.1

Affiliation:

1. UMR Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior (PNCA), AgroParisTech, INRA, University Paris-Saclay, Paris, France

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that, for rats fed a high-fat diet (HFD), a prioritization of maintaining protein intake may increase energy consumption and hence result in obesity, particularly for individuals prone to obesity (“fat sensitive,” FS, vs. “fat resistant,” FR). Male Wistar rats ( n = 80) first received 3 wk of HFD (protein 15%, fat 42%, carbohydrate 42%), under which they were characterized as being FS ( n = 18) or FR ( n = 20) based on body weight gain. They then continued on the same HFD but in which protein (100%) was available separately from the carbohydrate:fat (50:50%) mixture. Under this second regimen, all rats maintained their previous protein intake, whereas intake of fat and carbohydrate was reduced by 50%. This increased protein intake to 26% and decreased fat intake to 37%. Adiposity gain was prevented in both FR and FS rats, and gain in fat-free mass was increased only in FS rats. At the end of the study, the rats were killed 2 h after ingestion of a protein meal, and their tissues and organs were collected for analysis of body composition and measurement of mRNA levels in the liver, adipose tissue, arcuate nucleus, and nucleus accumbens. FS rats had a higher expression of genes encoding enzymes involved in lipogenesis in the liver and white adipose tissue. These results show that FS rats strongly reduced food intake and adiposity gain through macronutrient selection, despite maintenance of a relatively high-fat intake and overexpression of genes favoring lipogenesis.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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