Effect of intraduodenal lipid on parabrachial gustatory coding in awake rats.
Journal
  The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
Citation
  J Neurosci. 19(16):7182-90
Publication date
  1999 Aug 15
Authors
  Hajnal A
Takenouchi K
Norgren R
Investigators
  Andras Hajnal
Ralph Norgren
Grant agencies
  National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders
National Institute of Mental Health
Grants
  NIDCD DC 00240
NIMH MH 00653
NIMH MH 43787
MeSH headings
  Lipids
Pons
Taste
MeSH qualifiers
  pharmacology
physiology
Abstract
  Intestinal fat differentially suppresses sham feeding of liquid diets and preferred gustatory stimuli. Although the behavioral effect is robust, no electrophysiological evidence exists to account for its neural basis. Therefore, we investigated the effect of intestinal fat on gustatory coding in the pontine parabrachial nuclei (PBN) by recording from single neurons in awake rats before, during, and after intraduodenal infusions of lipid (Intralipid; 10 ml, 5 kcal). Intraduodenal lipid did not alter the response profiles of PBN taste neurons. It did, however, produce an overall decrease in response magnitude (-16.25%; n = 43), with the largest reduction to sucrose (-30%; n = 43). The most pronounced suppression occurred in sucrose-best neurons in response to sucrose (-55%; n = 19), and this effect was largest for the sucrose-specific cells (-77%; n = 3). After lipid infusions, nonspecific neurons in both the sucrose-best and NaCl-best categories also responded less to their best stimulus (sucrose, -46%; n = 16; NaCl, -35%; n = 13). In contrast, no significant changes were found in NaCl-specific cells in response to NaCl. All effects appeared with short latency ( approximately 5 min) and were reversible within the time frame of a meal. In controls, duodenal infusions of saline did not cause any changes in taste responsiveness. These results suggest that intestinal fat has specific effects on taste coding in the PBN that may contribute to the intake suppression of palatable food observed in behavioral studies. The similar, short latency of both the behavioral and neural effects supports the hypothesis of a preabsorptive site of action.
Medline ID
  99365377