Failure to demonstrate disruption of ultradian growth hormone rhythm and insulin secretion by dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus lesions that cause reduced body weight, linear growth and food intake
- 1 May 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Experimental Brain Research
- Vol. 66 (3) , 572-576
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00270690
Abstract
Weanling male rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions in the dorsomedial hypothalamic nuclei (DMNL rats); sham-operated animals served as controls. At the end of a 39-day postoperative period DMNL rats were lighter and shorter than controls and also exhibited significant hyopophagia. Their efficiency of food utilization (weight gained for the amount of food eaten) was normal, however. Subsequent determination of plasma growth hormone (GH) and insulin (IRI) levels every 15 min for 6-h periods from freely moving chronically cannulated rats showed no differences in pulsatile patterns and peaks of GH nor in plasma IRI levels between DMNL rats and controls. There was also no significant difference between mean 6-H GH and IRI concentrations between the two groups. The reduced body weight, length and food intake are apparently unrelated to the normal GH and IRI secretory patterns. In conjunction with previous data indicating normal somatomedin activity and normal responses to various homeostatic challenges, the data make a strong case for the argument that DMNL rats are not “growth-retarded”. Rather, they are normal animals that are “scaled-down” to a smaller size with maintenance of normal homeostatic capacity. This has been hypothesized to be due to the existence in these animals of an “organismic” set point.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Meal patterns of rats with dorsomedial hypothalamic nuclei lesions or sham operationsPhysiology & Behavior, 1986
- Differential Spontaneous and Stimulated in vitro Release of Newly Synthesized or Stored rGH and rPRL by Pituitaries from Rats with Hypothalamic LesionsNeuroendocrinology, 1986
- Plasma hormone levels in growth-retarded rats with dorsomedial hypothalamic lesionsPhysiology & Behavior, 1985
- Growth Hormone-Releasing Factor from a Human Pancreatic Tumor That Caused AcromegalyScience, 1982
- Characterization of a growth hormone-releasing factor from a human pancreatic islet tumourNature, 1982
- Feed efficiency in growth-retarded rats with ventromedial and dorsomedial hypothalamic lesions produced shortly after weaningPhysiology & Behavior, 1979
- Food intake and utilization in lateral hypothalamically lesioned ratsPhysiology & Behavior, 1978
- Defense of a lowered weight maintenance level by lateral hypothamically lesioned rats: Evidence from a restriction-refeeding regimenPhysiology & Behavior, 1977
- Origin of endocrine-metabolic changes in the weanling rat ventromedial syndromeJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1976
- Six-month follow-up in weanling rats with ventromedial and dorsomedial hypothalamic lesions: Somatic, endocrine, and metabolic changesJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1975