Frontiers in neuroscience

Different effects of activating movement-control neurons in the hindbrain of male and female rats

Updated

Abstract

Optogenetic activation of neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract reduced food intake in both male and female rats.

  • Activation of neurons producing GLP-1 in the hindbrain significantly decreased chow consumption in both sexes.
  • Motivated behavior for a sucrose reward was reduced only in female rats following neuron activation.
  • Chemogenetic activation of the same GLP-1 neurons also reduced sucrose motivation in females, but not in males.
  • Findings indicate a sex difference in how GLP-1 neuron activation influences food motivation.

Simplified

Key numbers

< 50%
Chow Intake Reduction
Male rats' chow intake after optogenetic activation
0 of 5
Sucrose Rewards Earned
Number of sucrose rewards earned by female rats after activation

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the role of -producing neurons in the hindbrain on feeding behavior in male and female rats.
  • It examines how activation of these neurons affects food intake and motivation for sucrose rewards.
  • Findings reveal significant sex differences in the impact of neuronal activation on motivated behavior.

Essence

  • Activation of hindbrain -producing neurons reduces food intake in both male and female rats, but only females show reduced motivation for sucrose rewards. This indicates a sex divergence in the control of motivated behavior by these neurons.

Key takeaways

  • Optogenetic activation of NTS -producing neurons significantly reduced chow intake in both sexes. Male rats consumed less than 50% of their sham-stimulated chow intake 1 hour after activation, while females also showed a similar reduction.
  • Only female rats exhibited reduced motivation for sucrose rewards following neuronal activation. They earned fewer sucrose rewards and made fewer lever presses for the reward, contrasting with male rats, who showed no change in these behaviors.
  • Chemogenetic activation of NTS neurons produced similar results, with female rats again displaying a decrease in motivated behavior for sucrose, while male rats did not exhibit any changes.

Caveats

  • The study primarily focuses on the effects in a controlled laboratory setting, which may not fully translate to natural feeding behaviors in wild rats. Further research is needed to explore the underlying mechanisms of these sex differences.
  • The findings are based on a specific transgenic rat model, which may limit the generalizability of the results to other populations or species.

Definitions

  • GLP-1: A hormone involved in glucose metabolism and appetite regulation, produced in the gut and brain.

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