In order to investigate the role of brown adipose tissue (BAT) in diet-induced thermogenesis (DIT), a selection of palatable, energy-dense foods (Cafeteria diet) was used to increase the energy intakes of adult and weanling male rats, from some of which interscapular BAT (IBAT) had been surgically excised. Removal of IBAT had no effect upon energy intakes of the cafeteria-fed rats, nor of controls fed a pelleted stock diet. The rate of weight gain of intact controls was similar for the two diets, but adults with IBAT removed and fed with the cafeteria diet gained weight more rapidly than those fed the stock diet. Similarly, although intact weanlings did not exhibit excess weight gain when fed the cafeteria diet, removal of IBAT did result in more rapid weight gain of the cafeteria-fed weanlings relative to their stock-fed siblings. Nevertheless, total carcass energy was increased by some 20% in cafeteria-fed animals, irrespective of whether they had had IBAT removed. Thus there was no evidence of removal of IBAT having improved the efficiency of energy utilisation for growth. The failure to find evidence for altered levels of energy expenditure following removal of IBAT does not necessarily contradict the hypothesis that BAT mediates DIT, however, since, following removal of IBAT, there was hypertrophy of remaining BAT sites which may have compensated for the BAT removed.
I. Four groups of rat pups were reared: mother-reared (MR) control (well-fed) and undernourished (MRC and MRU respectively) and artificially reared (AR) control and undernourished (ARC and ARU respectively). Pups for artificial rearing were fitted with a gastric cannula on postnatal day 5 and were fed, by intermittent gastric infusion, expressed rats' milk (days 5-7), mixtures of rats' milk and milk-substitute (days 8-16), and milksubstitute only (days 17-20). Solid food was available to MR pups throughout and to AR pups from day 14. Undernutrition, imposed from postnatal days 5 to 25, was effected initially by underfeeding the mother (MRU) or by infusing restricted quantities of milk (ARU). Weaning was at 21 d and undernutrition from day 21 to day 25 was by restricting the supply of solid food. A11 rats were fed ad lib. from 25 d.2. The developmental milestone, eye-opening, was delayed by undernutrition but unaffected by artificial rearing.3. Growth curves in body-weight during the refeeding phase were influenced most by previous undernutrition and to a lesser extent (also negatively) by artificial rearing. 4.Fourteen measures of body and organ growth were taken at autopsy at 39 weeks. Twelve measures were affected by nutrition and only four by rearing (weight of whole body, epididymal fat pads, renal fat pads and adrenals).5. AR rats had lighter epididymal and renal fat pads than MR rats perhaps due to the low fat content of the expressed milk they received early in artificial rearing.
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