0000000000278232

AUTHOR

Alfred J. Sipols

showing 10 related works from this author

Deconstructing the vanilla milkshake: The dominant effect of sucrose on self-administration of nutrient–flavor mixtures

2007

Rats and humans avidly consume flavored foods that contain sucrose and fat, presumably due to their rewarding qualities. In this study, we hypothesized that the complex mixture of corn oil, sucrose, and flavor is more reinforcing than any of these components alone. We observed a concentration-dependent increase in reinforcers of sucrose solutions received (0%, 3%, 6.25%, and 12.5%) in both fixed ratio and progressive ratio procedures, but with equicaloric corn oil solutions (0%, 1.4%, 2.8%, and 5.6%) this finding was replicated only in the fixed ratio procedure. Likewise, addition of 1.4% oil to 3% or 12.5% sucrose increased fixed ratio, but not progressive ratio, reinforcers received relat…

MaleSucroseSelf AdministrationFlavoring AgentsArticleFood Preferenceschemistry.chemical_compoundNutrientDietary SucroseAnimalsFood scienceVanillaGeneral PsychologyFlavorNutrition and DieteticsDietary Sucrosefood and beveragesDietary FatsRatsFlavoring AgentsSolutionschemistryCorn OilDairy ProductsProgressive ratioEnergy IntakeSelf-administrationCorn oilAppetite
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Sucrose self-administration and CNS activation in the rat

2011

We have previously reported that administration of insulin into the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus decreases motivation for sucrose, assessed by a self-administration task, in rats. Because the pattern of central nervous system (CNS) activation in association with sucrose self-administration has not been evaluated, in the present study, we measured expression of c-Fos as an index of neuronal activation. We trained rats to bar-press for sucrose, according to a fixed-ratio (FR) or progressive-ratio (PR) schedule and mapped expression of c-Fos immunoreactivity in the CNS, compared with c-Fos expression in handled controls. We observed a unique expression of c-Fos in the medial hypothalam…

Central Nervous SystemMaleSucrosemedicine.medical_specialtyLateral hypothalamusPhysiologyHypothalamusSelf AdministrationNucleus accumbensBiologyc-FosNucleus AccumbensRats Mutant StrainsEnergy homeostasisArcuate nucleusPhysiology (medical)Internal medicineBasal gangliamedicineAnimalsHomeostasisNeuronsMotivationArticlesRatsStria terminalisEndocrinologyHypothalamusModels Animalbiology.proteinEnergy MetabolismProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosNeuroscienceAmerican Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
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Association of obesity with proteasomal gene polymorphisms in children.

2013

The aim of this study was to ascertain possible associations between childhood obesity, its anthropometric and clinical parameters, and three loci of proteasomal genes rs2277460 (PSMA6c.-110C>A), rs1048990 (PSMA6c.-8C>G), and rs2348071 (PSMA3c. 543+138G>A) implicated in obesity-related diseases. Obese subjects included 94 otherwise healthy children in Latvia. Loci were genotyped and then analyzed using polymerase chain reactions, with results compared to those of 191 nonobese controls.PSMA3SNP frequency differences between obese children and controls, while not reaching significance, suggested a trend. These differences, however, proved highly significant (P<0.002) in the subset…

Blood GlucoseMalelcsh:Internal medicinePediatric ObesityProteasome Endopeptidase ComplexArticle SubjectAdolescentGenotypeEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismPSMA6Blood PressurePSMA3Polymorphism Single NucleotideChildhood obesityBody Mass IndexmedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to Diseaselcsh:RC31-1245ChildGeneGeneticsAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryCholesterol LDLAnthropometrymedicine.diseaseObesityCase-Control StudiesChild PreschoolFemalebusinessResearch ArticleJournal of obesity
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Insulin acts at different CNS sites to decrease acute sucrose intake and sucrose self-administration in rats.

2008

Findings from our laboratory and others have demonstrated that the hormone insulin has chronic effects within the CNS to regulate energy homeostasis and to decrease brain reward function. In this study, we compared the acute action of insulin to decrease intake of a palatable food in two different behavioral tasks—progressive ratios sucrose self-administration and mu opioid-stimulated sucrose feeding—when administered into several insulin-receptive sites of the CNS. We tested insulin efficacy within the medial hypothalamic arcuate (ARC) and paraventricular (PVN) nuclei, the nucleus accumbens, and the ventral tegmental area. Administration of insulin at a dose that has no chronic effect on …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtySucrosePhysiologymedicine.medical_treatmentReceptors Opioid muSelf AdministrationBiologyNucleus accumbensNucleus Accumbenschemistry.chemical_compoundRewardPhysiology (medical)Internal medicinemedicineAnimalsInsulinOpioid peptidePancreatic hormoneMotivationBehavior AnimalAppetite RegulationInsulinVentral Tegmental AreaArcuate Nucleus of HypothalamusBrainEnkephalin Ala(2)-MePhe(4)-Gly(5)-RatsVentral tegmental areaDAMGOmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologychemistryCall for PapersBrain stimulation rewardSelf-administrationParaventricular Hypothalamic NucleusAmerican journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology
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Integration of Peripheral Adiposity Signals and Psychological Controls of Appetite

2007

Publisher Summary This chapter presents an overview of the major anatomical and neurochemical participants in brain reward circuitry. It also elaborates the evidence available to date that supports the hypothesis that energy regulatory signals can modulate food reward. Psychological modulation of feeding involves taste hedonics and preferences, and the rewarding aspects of food. The brain circuitries implicated in stimulus reward, and in the regulation of energy balance, have traditionally been considered as separate. However, more recently, accumulated evidence suggests that there is both anatomical and functional crosstalk between these sets of central nervous system (CNS) circuitry. Addi…

Efferentmedia_common.quotation_subjectLeptinCentral nervous systemAppetiteStimulus (physiology)Neurochemicalmedicine.anatomical_structureNegative feedbackmedicineBrain stimulation rewardPsychologyNeurosciencemedia_common
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Energy regulatory signals and food reward.

2009

The hormones insulin, leptin, and ghrelin have been demonstrated to act in the central nervous system (CNS) as regulators of energy homeostasis, acting at medial hypothalamic sites. Here, we summarize research demonstrating that, in addition to direct homeostatic actions at the hypothalamus, CNS circuitry that subserves reward and is also a direct and indirect target for the action of these endocrine regulators of energy homeostasis. Specifically, insulin and leptin can decrease food reward behaviors and modulate the function of neurotransmitter systems and neural circuitry that mediate food reward, the midbrain dopamine (DA) and opioidergic pathways. Ghrelin can increase food reward behavi…

Clinical BiochemistryCentral nervous systemDiet and obesityToxicologyBiochemistryEnergy homeostasisArticleBehavioral NeuroscienceRewardDopaminemedicineAnimalsHomeostasisHumansOvereatingBiological PsychiatryPharmacologyLeptindigestive oral and skin physiologyBrainFeeding Behaviormedicine.anatomical_structureHypothalamusFoodGhrelinNerve NetPsychologyEnergy MetabolismNeurosciencemedicine.drugPharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior
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Inflammatory Cytokine IFNγ, IL-6, and IL-10 Association with Childhood Obesity

2021

Abstract Childhood obesity carries a high risk of serious life-threatening cardiometabolic diseases in adulthood, which are associated with low-grade inflammation. The aim of the present study was to measure serum cytokine concentrations in obese children recruited during endocrinology consultations and compared to lean control the results. Blood serum concentrations of interferon gamma (IFNγ), IL-1β, Interleukin 6 IL-6, IL-10, and TNF-α were analysed applying Luminex xMap technology with Millipore reagent kits. Statistical analyses were performed using t-test comparisons and Spearman correlations. Obese children had highly significant increased levels of circulating IFNγ (p < 0.0001), I…

Interleukin 10Cytokinebiologybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologybiology.proteinmedicineInterleukin 6medicine.diseasebusinessChildhood obesityProceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. Section B. Natural, Exact, and Applied Sciences.
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MODULATION OF FOOD REWARD BY ADIPOSITY SIGNALS

2006

Extensive historical evidence from the drug abuse literature has provided support for the concept that there is functional communication between central nervous system (CNS) circuitries which subserve reward/motivation, and the regulation of energy homeostasis. This concept is substantiated by recent studies that map anatomical pathways, or which demonstrate that hormones and neurotransmitters associated with energy homeostasis regulation can directly modulate reward and motivation behaviors. Studies from our laboratory have focused specifically on the candidate adiposity hormones, insulin and leptin, and show that these hormones can decrease performance in behavioral paradigms that assess …

LeptinExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyEnergy homeostasisArticleBehavioral NeuroscienceRewardDopaminemedicineAnimalsHomeostasisInsulinAdiposityMotivationModalitiesBehavior AnimalAppetite RegulationStressormedicine.diseaseRatsVentral tegmental areaSubstance abusemedicine.anatomical_structureFoodSelf-administrationPsychologyEnergy MetabolismNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesmedicine.drugHormone
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Effect of recurrent yohimbine on immediate and post-hoc behaviors, stress hormones, and energy homeostatic parameters

2013

Evidence from experimental models has suggested that acute activation of brain stress and anxiety pathways impacts subsequent behaviors that are mediated or modulated by limbic circuitry. There have been limited investigations of prior or chronic activation of these pathways on subsequent limbic-mediated behaviors. In this study, we tested whether recurrent administration of the anxiogenic compound yohimbine (YOH) could have post-injection effects on brain activation, stress hormones, and performance in sucrose self-administration and startle response paradigms. Rats received six injections across two weeks of either 2mg/kg YOH or saline. Behavioral evaluation confirmed the continued effica…

MaleReflex Startlemedicine.medical_specialtyStartle responseHippocampusExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAdrenocorticotropic hormoneMotor ActivityAmygdalaArticleEatingBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundAdrenocorticotropic HormoneDietary SucroseCorticosteroneInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsPsychotropic Drugsmedicine.diagnostic_testBody WeightBrainYohimbineFeeding BehaviorImmunohistochemistryRatsYohimbineVentral tegmental areamedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyAnxiogenicchemistryCorticosteronePsychologyProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosStress Psychologicalmedicine.drugPhysiology & Behavior
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Anatomical differentiation of the suppressive effects of insulin on two food reward tasks

2008

medicine.medical_specialtyNutrition and DieteticsEndocrinologybusiness.industryInternal medicineInsulinmedicine.medical_treatmentmedicinebusinessGeneral PsychologyAppetite
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