1977
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.1977.232.5.r150
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Involvement of a humoral factor in regulation of body weight in parabiotic rats

Abstract: Excessive food intake and obesity was induced in one member of parabiotic pairs by electrical stimulation (three 30-min sessions/day for 2 wk) of the lateral hypothalamus (LH). The nonstimulated partners reduced spontaneous food intake the fatter the stimulated animals became. This reduced food intake resulted in a decreased body weight, fat content, and fat-free solid body mass. The decrease of food intake was not due to changed social behavior of the obese partner. It must be attributed to transmission of a … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Parabiosis experiments with obese mice (1, 2) or rats (3,4) demonstrated the involvement of circulating factors as feedback signals in the regulation of energy balance. Zhang et al (5) recently used positional cloning to identify one such potential signal that is mutated in genetically obese ob/ob mice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parabiosis experiments with obese mice (1, 2) or rats (3,4) demonstrated the involvement of circulating factors as feedback signals in the regulation of energy balance. Zhang et al (5) recently used positional cloning to identify one such potential signal that is mutated in genetically obese ob/ob mice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The existence of a factor secreted in proportion to energy stores in WAT, which acts in the brain to control feeding, weight and WAT mass, was first proposed by Kennedy (16) and is supported by the discovery of monogenic mutations resulting in obesity, as well as classic cross-circulation (parabiosis) experiments in rodents (17)(18)(19)(20). The list of adipocytokines known to affect metabolism keeps growing (Table 1).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stimulation of the LH induces stimulus-bound feeding and weight gain. 18 In contrast, lesions in the LH produce a characteristic acute hypophagia 19 and an increase in the activity of the SNS, 20,21 which is followed by permanent reduction in body weight. Hypophagia after an LH lesion (or treatment with fen¯uramine) does not occur if the weight of the test subjects is acutely reduced by food restriction to a level below what would be achieved after the lesion or drug treatment.…”
Section: The Sympathetic Nervous System and Food Intake: Experimentalmentioning
confidence: 99%