Hepatic gluconeogenesis in rats trained to eat a single meal daily. Role of eating periodicity and the amount of food ingested in the last meal


Autoria(s): Batista, Márcia R.; Vasconcelos, Márcio S.; Rebola, Vinícius D.; Galletto, Ricardo; Curi, Rui; Bazotte, Roberto B.
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

27/05/2014

27/05/2014

01/12/2001

Resumo

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

Rats trained to eat a single daily meal (MF rats), from 8:00-10:00 a.m., increased food intake from the 1 st to the 12 th (125%) day of feeding training. In this work we compared the influence of the higher food ingestion in the last meal and feeding training on hepatic gluconeogenesis. Thus, rats at the 1 st (MF 1st day-5g group) and 13 th day (MF 13th day-5g group) of training, refed with a fixed amount of food (5g) were employed. In addition, a third group of MF rats, refed on day 12 with 75% (12g) of the food ingested by MF rats on the 13 th day of the feeding training (MF 13th day-12g) was included. The experiments were performed at 22 h after meal (8:00 a.m.). Our results demonstrated that feeding training had a crucial role in determining gluconeogenesis from pyruvate (5 mM). Additionally, gluconeogenesis from L-glutamine (5 mM) was influenced by periodicity of eating and the amount of food ingested in the last meal. In contrast, gluconeogenesis from L-alanine (5 mM) was not influenced by both factors. In conclusion, our findings suggested that the hepatic gluconeogenesis was influenced by food ingestion and/or feeding training depending of the substrate investigated. These effects on gluconeogenesis may have implications for use in diabetic regimens.

Formato

345-356

Identificador

Research Communications in Molecular Pathology and Pharmacology, v. 109, n. 5-6, p. 345-356, 2001.

1078-0297

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/66743

2-s2.0-0042371960

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

Research Communications in Molecular Pathology and Pharmacology

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Eating schedules #Feeding training #Food intake #Gluconeogenesis #Implications in diabetes #L-glutamine and L-alanine and gluconeogenesis #Periodicity of eating #alanine #glutamine #pyruvic acid #animal experiment #animal model #controlled study #diabetic diet #feeding #food intake #gluconeogenesis #liver metabolism #male #nonhuman #priority journal #rat #Adaptation, Physiological #Animals #Blood Glucose #Eating #Glucose #Lactates #Liver #Liver Glycogen #Male #Periodicity #Rats #Rats, Wistar #Urea
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article