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Genetic selection for body weight in chickens has altered responses of the brain's AMPK system to food intake regulation effect of ghrelin, but not obestatin
Genetic breeding for chicken body weight changes brain energy regulation responses to hunger hormone ghrelin but not to obestatin
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Abstract
Intracerebroventricular injection of 0.4 nmol ghrelin decreased food intake in chicks selected for low body weight at a lower threshold than in those selected for high body weight.
- The effect of ghrelin on food intake is mediated by the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) system in chickens.
- A dose-dependent increase in food intake was observed with obestatin in high body weight chicks but not in low body weight chicks.
- Ghrelin injection inhibited gene expression and phosphorylation related to the AMPK system, with differing effects between lines.
- No effect of obestatin was found on AMPK system mRNA expression or phosphorylation in either line.
- Higher hypothalamic levels of ghrelin and its receptor in low body weight chicks may contribute to their different response to ghrelin.
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