Potent and sustained satiety actions of a cholecystokinin octapeptide analogue
Open Access
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 55 (1) , 286S-290S
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/55.1.286s
Abstract
The relative ability of a norleucine substituted cholecystokinin (CCK) analogue, U-67827E, to interact with CCK receptors and to inhibit food intake was examined across a variety of paradigms. U-67827E and CCK had identical in vitro potencies as demonstrated by their ability to induce pyloric contractions or competitively inhibit [l25I]CCK-8 binding to type A and B CCK receptors. However, the in vivo potency of U-67827E was significantly greater than that of CCK-8. In rats, U-67827E inhibited food intake with 10–100 times the potency of CCK. In rhesus monkeys, U-67827E produced significantly greater inhibitions of daily food intake and did so in a dose-dependent manner with no evidence of compensation or tolerance. U-67827E also inhibited gastric emptying for significantly longer durations than CCK. Together these results demonstrate that CCK analogues with increased in vivo bioavailability can affect food intake beyond a single meal.Keywords
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