86 results on '"Toshimasa Osaka"'
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2. The EP
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Toshimasa, Osaka
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Hypothalamus ,Animals ,Receptors, Prostaglandin E ,Receptors, Prostaglandin E, EP2 Subtype ,Preoptic Area ,Receptors, Prostaglandin E, EP4 Subtype ,Rats - Abstract
This study aimed to re-examine the receptor subtype that mediates the fever-producing effects of prostaglandin E
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- 2021
3. Hypothermia induced by inhibition of fatty acid metabolism in anesthetized rats: contributions of the forebrain and vagal afferents
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Toshimasa Osaka
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypothermia ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Prosencephalon ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Anesthesia ,Rats, Wistar ,Respiratory exchange ratio ,Saline ,Pharmacology ,Fatty acid metabolism ,Chemistry ,Fatty Acids ,Vagus Nerve ,General Medicine ,Thermoregulation ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Capsaicin ,Thioglycolates ,Renal physiology ,Injections, Intravenous ,medicine.symptom ,Energy source ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
2-Mercaptoacetate (MA) is an antimetabolic drug that inhibits the utilization of fatty acids as an energy source. The intravenous injection of MA (1.2 mmol·kg−1) elicited an increase in tail skin temperature and a decrease in body core temperature in urethane–chloralose-anesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked, artificially ventilated rats, although administration of the same amount of NaCl did not. The respiratory exchange ratio was significantly higher after administration of MA than that after the saline treatment. On the other hand, heat production was increased by either the MA- or NaCl-injection, suggesting a nonspecific effect caused by the hyperosmolality of the solutions. These results indicate that the MA-induced hypothermia was caused by an increase in heat loss but not by a decrease in heat production. The amplitudes of heat loss responses to MA in rats fasted overnight were significantly smaller than those in fed ones, suggesting a mechanism for suppression of heat loss in the fasted state. Rats pretreated with vagotomy, capsaicin-induced desensitization of sensory nerve fibers or decerebration did not exhibit the MA-induced hypothermic responses. It is possible that the MA-induced heat loss and hypothermia were mediated by the vagal afferents and required the forebrain for the full expression of the responses.
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- 2017
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4. 2-Deoxy-d-glucose-induced hypothermia in anesthetized rats: Lack of forebrain contribution and critical involvement of the rostral raphe/parapyramidal regions of the medulla oblongata
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Toshimasa Osaka
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Male ,Tail ,medicine.medical_specialty ,GABA Agents ,Hypothermia ,Deoxyglucose ,Biology ,Urethane ,Midbrain ,Prosencephalon ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Decerebrate State ,Raphe ,General Neuroscience ,Thermogenesis ,Thermoregulation ,Receptors, GABA-A ,Respiration, Artificial ,Endocrinology ,Chloralose ,nervous system ,Regional Blood Flow ,Models, Animal ,Forebrain ,Neuromuscular Blockade ,Medulla oblongata ,Raphe Nuclei ,GABAergic ,Brainstem ,medicine.symptom ,Anesthetics, Intravenous - Abstract
Systemic or central administration of 2-deoxy- d -glucose (2DG), a competitive inhibitor of glucose utilization, induces hypothermia in awake animals and humans. This response is mediated by the central nervous system, though the neural mechanism involved is largely unknown. In this study, I examined possible involvement of the forebrain, which contains the hypothalamic thermoregulatory center, and the medullary rostral raphe/parapyramidal regions (rRPa/PPy), which mediate hypoxia-induced heat-loss responses, in 2DG-induced hypothermia in urethane–chloralose-anesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked, artificially ventilated rats. The intravenous injection of 2DG (250 mg kg −1 ) elicited an increase in tail skin temperature and decreases in body core temperature and the respiratory exchange ratio, though it did not induce any significant change in the metabolic rate. These results indicate that the hypothermic response was caused by an increase in heat loss, but not by a decrease in heat production and that it was accompanied by a decrease in carbohydrate utilization and/or an increase in lipid utilization as energy substrates. Complete surgical transection of the brainstem between the hypothalamus and the midbrain had no effect on the 2DG-induced hypothermic responses, suggesting that the hindbrain, but not the forebrain, was sufficient for the responses. However, pretreatment of the rRPa/PPy with the GABA A receptor blocker bicuculline methiodide, but not with vehicle saline, greatly attenuated the 2DG-induced responses, suggesting that the 2DG-induced hypothermia was mediated, at least in part, by GABAergic neurons in the hindbrain and activation of GABA A receptors on cutaneous sympathetic premotor neurons in the rRPa/PPy.
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- 2015
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5. Hypoxia-induced hypothermia mediated by GABA in the rostral parapyramidal area of the medulla oblongata
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Toshimasa Osaka
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Microinjections ,Hypothermia ,Bicuculline ,Membrane Potentials ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,GABA-A Receptor Antagonists ,Rats, Wistar ,Hypoxia ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Neurons ,Analysis of Variance ,Medulla Oblongata ,Raphe ,Chemistry ,GABAA receptor ,General Neuroscience ,Glutamate receptor ,Thermoregulation ,Preoptic Area ,Rats ,Oxygen ,Preoptic area ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Medulla oblongata ,Rostral ventromedial medulla ,medicine.symptom ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Hypoxia evokes a regulated decrease in the body core temperature (Tc) in a variety of animals. The neuronal mechanisms of this response include, at least in part, glutamatergic activation in the lateral preoptic area (LPO) of the hypothalamus. As the sympathetic premotor neurons in the medulla oblongata constitute a cardinal relay station in the descending neuronal pathway from the hypothalamus for thermoregulation, their inhibition can also be critically involved in the mechanisms of the hypoxia-induced hypothermia. Here, I examined the hypothesis that hypoxia-induced hypothermia is mediated by glutamate-responsive neurons in the LPO that activate GABAergic transmission in the rostral raphe pallidus (rRPa) and neighboring parapyramidal region (PPy) of the medulla oblongata in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked, artificially ventilated rats. Unilateral microinjection of GABA (15nmol) into the rRPa and PPy regions elicited a prompt increase in tail skin temperature (Ts) and decreases in Tc, oxygen consumption rate (VO2), and heart rate. Next, when the GABAA receptor blocker bicuculline methiodide (bicuculline methiodide (BMI), 10pmol) alone was microinjected into the rRPa, it elicited unexpected contradictory responses: simultaneous increases in Ts, VO2 and heart rate and a decrease in Tc. Then, when BMI was microinjected bilaterally into the PPy, no direct effect on Ts was seen; and thermogenic and tachycardic responses were slight. However, pretreatment of the PPy with BMI, but not vehicle saline, greatly attenuated the hypothermic responses evoked by hypoxic (10%O2-90%N2, 5min) ventilation or bilateral microinjections of glutamate (5nmol, each side) into the LPO. The results suggest that hypoxia-induced hypothermia was mediated, at least in part, by the activation of GABAA receptors in the PPy.
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- 2014
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6. Vagal Hyperactivity Due to Ventromedial Hypothalamic Lesions Increases Adiponectin Production and Release
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Naoto Kubota, Haruaki Kageyama, Seiji Shioda, Akira Senoo, Tetsuya Kubota, Hiroyuki Shimizu, Shuji Inoue, Noriko Ishizuka, Yoko Suzuki, Masatomo Mori, Akiyo Matsumoto, Toshimasa Osaka, Satoshi Hirako, Takashi Kadowaki, and Hyounju Kim
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Atropine ,Blood Glucose ,Leptin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adipose tissue ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Mice ,Parasympathetic nervous system ,Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Hyperinsulinemia ,Animals ,Insulin ,Oxidopamine ,Adiponectin ,business.industry ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Vagus Nerve ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Vagus nerve ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Adipose Tissue ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Carbachol ,Female ,Adipocyte hypertrophy ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
In obese humans and animals, adiponectin production and release in adipose tissue are downregulated by feedback inhibition, resulting in decreased serum adiponectin. We investigated adiponectin production and release in ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH)-lesioned animals. VMH-lesioned mice showed significant increases in food intake and body weight gain, with hyperinsulinemia and hyperleptinemia at 1 and 4 weeks after VMH-lesioning. Serum adiponectin was elevated in VMH-lesioned mice at 1 and 4 weeks, despite adipocyte hypertrophy in subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissues and increased body fat. Adiponectin production and mRNA were also increased in both adipose tissues in VMH-lesioned mice at 1 week. These results were replicated in VMH-lesioned rats at 1 week. Daily atropine administration for 5 days or subdiaphragmatic vagotomy completely reversed the body weight gain and eliminated the increased adiponectin production and release in these rats, with reversal to a normal serum adiponectin level. Parasympathetic nerve activation by carbachol infusion for 5 days in rats increased serum adiponectin, with increased adiponectin production in visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues without changes of body weight. These results demonstrate that activation of the parasympathetic nerve by VMH lesions stimulates production of adiponectin in visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues and adiponectin release, resulting in elevated serum adiponectin.
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- 2014
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7. Ventromedial hypothalamic lesions enhance small intestinal cell proliferation in mice
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Kahoru Sasaki, Nobuo Imazeki, Akira Senoo, Kaori Hayashi, Shuji Inoue, Yuri Kintaka, Noriko Ishizuka, Hiroyuki Shimizu, Tosei Takahashi, Yuichi Suzuki, Ryota Haba, Yoko Kobayashi, Yoko Suzuki, Masako Kako, Katsumi Arai, and Toshimasa Osaka
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cell growth ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Cell ,Small intestine ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Proliferating cell nuclear antigen ,Intestinal cell ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mitotic cell ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Mitosis - Abstract
Summary Background We have found previously that ventromedial hypothalamic lesions (VMH) enhance cell proliferation in the visceral organs through vagal hyperactivity in rats. The goal of the current study was to determine the characteristics and nature of cell proliferation in the small intestine in VMH-lesioned mice. Methods The weight and length of the small intestine, thickness of the mucosal and muscle layers, number of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-positive cells, and mitotic cell count in the mucosal layer in VMH-lesioned and Sham VMH-lesioned mice were determined at 7 days after the operation. Results The weight and length of the small intestine in VMH-lesioned mice were significantly greater than those in Sham VMH-lesioned mice, by 11.6% and 15.0%, respectively. The thicknesses of the mucosal and muscle layers of the small intestine in VMH-lesioned mice were also significantly greater than those in Sham VMH-lesioned mice, by 12.7% and 12.5%, respectively. PCNA-positive cells and mitotic cells in the mucosal layer were densely present in crypts in VMH-lesioned mice, and were significantly increased by 31.9% and 71.7%, respectively, compared to Sham VMH-lesioned mice. Conclusions These results demonstrate that VMH lesions in mice enhance cell proliferation in the mucosal layers and cause cell hypertrophy or cell proliferation in the muscle layers of the small intestine, which increases the weight and length of the small intestine. VMH lesions in mice may be a new tool for identifying growth factors and related genes involved in enlarging the small intestine mainly through cell proliferation.
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- 2012
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8. Masked function of amino acid sensors on pancreatic hormone secretion in ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesioned rats with marked hyperinsulinemia
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Yuichi Suzuki, Yuri Kintaka, Shuji Inoue, Yoko Suzuki, Ikiko Kinoshita, Nobuo Imazeki, Tosei Takahashi, Ryota Haba, Kahoru Sasaki, Noriko Ishizuka, Yoko Kobayashi, Akira Senoo, Hiroyuki Shimizu, Takeo Hashiguchi, Kaori Hayashi, Toshimasa Osaka, Masako Kako, Katsumi Arai, and Katsuaki Tanaka
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glucagon secretion ,medicine.disease ,Amino acid ,Vagus nerve ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hyperinsulinemia ,Leucine ,Pancreas ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Pancreatic hormone - Abstract
Summary In neural regulation of the endocrine pancreas, there is much evidence to suggest that vagal efferents alter insulin and glucagon secretion, but less information on the effects of vagal afferents. In this study, we investigated the role and function of afferent fibers of the vagus nerve in normal and ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesioned rats with marked hyperinsulinemia. In normal rats, hepatic vagotomy was associated with intraperitoneal (ip) arginine-induced enhancement of insulin and glucagon secretion without an accompanying change in blood glucose levels, ip leucine induced enhancement of insulin secretion accompanied by a decrease in blood glucose levels, and ip alanine-induced enhancement of glucagon secretion accompanied by an increase in blood glucose levels. In VMH lesioned rats with marked hyperinsulinemia, none of these amino acids caused significant changes in insulin and glucagon secretion. We conclude that amino acid sensors in normal rats inhibit excess release of pancreatic hormones induced directly by intake of amino acids, such as that in excess protein ingestion, and maintain blood glucose levels within the normal range. In contrast, in VMH lesioned rats with marked hyperinsulinemia, the function of the amino acid sensors is masked due to the marked hyperinsulinemia in these rats.
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- 2012
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9. Beneficial effects of ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) lesioning on function and morphology of the liver after hepatectomy in rats
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Takashi Miki, Toshimasa Osaka, Hiroyuki Shimizu, Masako Kako, Akira Senoo, Shuji Inoue, Yoko Suzuki, Noriko Ishizuka, Eun Young Lee, Kahoru Sasaki, and Nobuo Imazeki
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypothalamus ,Biology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Hepatectomy ,Molecular Biology ,Cell Proliferation ,Cell growth ,General Neuroscience ,Lipids ,Liver regeneration ,Liver Regeneration ,Rats ,Proliferating cell nuclear antigen ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Hepatocytes ,biology.protein ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Liver function ,Indocyanine green ,Function (biology) ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Liver has a high regenerative capacity and restores its mass and function shortly after partial hepatectomy through increased proliferation and metabolic modification of hepatocytes. The proliferation of hepatocytes can be triggered by its mass reduction after hepatectomy or by the neural factors including lesioning of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH). In the present study, we examined the effect of VMH lesioning on liver regeneration in hepatectomized rats by evaluating liver function and morphology. We found that functional deficits caused by partial hepatectomy [prolonged prothrombin time (PT), increased indocyanine green (ICG) retention, and decrease in PAS (periodic Acid-Schiff staining)-positive hepatocytes] were restored by VMH lesioning at 1 week after the surgery, whereas these alterations disappeared at 4 weeks. Morphologically, lipid microdroplets, which are considered to be important for maintaining contiguous liver function via supplying fuel for cell proliferation, were found to accumulate in hepatocytes of the hepatectomized rats at early period (1 day) after partial hepatectomy. Interestingly, such lipid microdroplets were also detected in the VMH lesioned rats and the more abundantly in the VMH lesioned, hepatectomized rats up to 1 week after the surgery. In conclusion, our results suggest that VMH lesioning in rats promotes recovery of liver anatomically and functionally after partial hepatectomy by promoting cell proliferation process.
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- 2011
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10. Changes of Neuron-Specific and Apoptosis Gene Expression Levels After Ventromedial Hypothalamic Lesions in Rat Intestine
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Eiko Nakata, Yoko Suzuki, Yuri Kintaka, Toshimasa Osaka, Shuji Inoue, Takayoshi Kiba, and Yasuhito Ishigaki
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Gene Expression ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Gene family ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Gene ,Cell Proliferation ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Neurons ,Regulation of gene expression ,Cell growth ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Intestinal epithelium ,Molecular biology ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Female ,Neuron - Abstract
The intestinal epithelium is continuously renewed through a balance between cell proliferation and apoptosis. We identified genes of which expression profiles showed significant modulation, and we investigated the cellular mechanisms of this gene regulation in rat intestine after ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesions. Total RNA was extracted, and differences in the gene expression profiles between rats at day 3 after VMH lesioning and in sham-VMH lesioned rats were investigated using DNA microarray analysis and real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods. DNA microarray analysis revealed that VMH lesions regulated the genes that were involved in functions predominantly related to neuronal development, cell proliferation and apoptosis. Real-time PCR also confirmed that gene expressions of Efnb1 were downregulated. Meanwhile, expression of Casp3 was similar. It is noted that the signaling networks of many gene families, including neuron-specific genes and apoptosis genes in the intestine were changed after VMH lesioning. VMH lesions may suppress mainly the caspase independent type II pathway for apoptosis and induce cell proliferation in the intestine.
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- 2008
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11. Blockade of prostaglandin E2-induced thermogenesis by unilateral microinjection of GABAA receptor antagonist into the preoptic area
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Toshimasa Osaka
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Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fever ,Microinjections ,Biology ,Bicuculline ,Dinoprostone ,Functional Laterality ,Body Temperature ,GABA Antagonists ,Oxygen Consumption ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,GABA-A Receptor Antagonists ,Rats, Wistar ,Prostaglandin E2 ,Molecular Biology ,Microinjection ,Lamina terminalis ,GABAA receptor ,General Neuroscience ,Antagonist ,Thermogenesis ,Preoptic Area ,Rats ,Pyridazines ,Preoptic area ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gabazine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that pretreatment of rats with a GABA(A) receptor antagonist microinjected bilaterally into the preoptic area (POA) blocked cold- or lipopolysaccharide-induced thermogenesis. Here, the involvement of GABA(A) receptors in prostaglandin (PG)E2-induced fever was examined. Thermogenic, tachycardic, vasoconstrictive, and hyperthermic responses were elicited by the unilateral microinjection of 0.57-1.1 pmol PGE2 into the region adjacent to the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized rats. All these responses were blocked 10 min after pretreatment of the rats with a GABA(A) receptor antagonist, bicuculline methiodide or gabazine (50-500 pmol), microinjected unilaterally into the POA; and recovery occurred at approximately 70 min. Though the antagonist treatment alone had no effect on the O2 consumption rate or colonic temperature, it did elicit a bradycardic response. Pretreatment with the vehicle, saline, had no effect on the PGE2-induced responses. However, the blocking action of bicuculline/gabazine was efficacious when the agent was administered unilaterally, but not necessarily bilaterally, into the POA either contralateral or ipsilateral to the PGE2 injection site. These results suggest that the PGE2-induced responses are not simply mediated by the GABAergic transmission from the PGE2-sensitive site to the thermoefferent structure in the POA, although a tonic inhibitory input to POA neurons has a permissive role for the full expression of PGE2-induced fever.
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- 2008
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12. Studies of UCP2 transgenic and knockout mice reveal that liver UCP2 is not essential for the antiobesity effects of fish oil
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Osamu Ezaki, Chikako Shozawa, Nobuyo Tsuboyama-Kasaoka, Toshimasa Osaka, and Kayo Sano
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Ratón ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Transgene ,Gene Expression ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,Mitochondrion ,Ion Channels ,Safflower oil ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,Mice ,Fish Oils ,Physiology (medical) ,Uncoupling protein 2 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Uncoupling protein ,Uncoupling Protein 2 ,Obesity ,RNA, Messenger ,Safflower Oil ,Mice, Knockout ,Sex Characteristics ,Fish oil ,Dietary Fats ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,Knockout mouse ,Female ,Anti-Obesity Agents - Abstract
Uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) is a possible target molecule for energy dissipation. Many dietary fats, including safflower oil and lard, induce obesity in C57BL/6 mice, whereas fish oil does not. Fish oil increases UCP2 expression in hepatocytes and may enhance UCP2 activity by activating the UCP2 molecule or altering the lipid bilayer environment. To examine the role of liver UCP2 in obesity, we created transgenic mice that overexpressed human UCP2 in hepatocytes and examined whether UCP2 transgenic mice showed less obesity when fed a high-fat diet (safflower oil or lard). In addition, we examined whether fish oil had antiobesity effects in UCP2 knockout mice. UCP2 transgenic and wild-type mice fed a high-fat diet (safflower oil or lard) developed obesity to a similar degree. UCP2 knockout and wild-type mice fed fish oil had lower rates of obesity than mice fed safflower oil. Remarkably, safflower oil did not induce obesity in female UCP2 knockout mice, an unexpected phenotype for which we presently have no explanation. However, this unexpected effect was not observed in male UCP2 knockout mice or in UCP2 knockout mice fed a high-lard diet. These data indicate that liver UCP2 is not essential for fish oil-induced decreases in body fat.
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- 2008
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13. Lipopolysaccharide-induced thermogenesis mediated by GABA in the preoptic area of anesthetized rats
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Toshimasa Osaka
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,GABAA receptor ,Chemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antagonist ,Bicuculline ,Vagotomy ,Biochemistry ,Preoptic area ,Endocrinology ,Hypothalamus ,Internal medicine ,Microinjections ,medicine ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Thermogenesis ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Intravenous injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 1 μg/kg) elicited triphasic thermogenic and tachycardic responses with the peaks at ∼60, 100, and 130 min in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized rats. The colonic temperature increased monophasically by 0.9–2.2 °C. Repeated bilateral microinjections of a GABAA receptor antagonist, bicuculline methiodide, into the preoptic area (POA) of the hypothalamus at 40, 80, and 120 min abolished all phases of the LPS-induced responses, which were also blocked by pretreatment with indomethacin, but not by vagotomy. These results suggest that the LPS-induced febrile responses are mediated by a GABA-receptive mechanism in the POA.
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- 2006
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14. Thermogenesis elicited by skin cooling in anaesthetized rats: lack of contribution of the cerebral cortex
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Toshimasa Osaka
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Chemistry ,Chloralose ,medicine.drug_class ,Pancuronium bromide ,Stimulation ,Muscle relaxant ,Propranolol ,Stimulus (physiology) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cerebral cortex ,Internal medicine ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Thermogenesis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Non-noxious cooling stimuli were delivered to the shaved back of urethane-chloralose-anaesthetized, artificially ventilated rats using a plastic bag containing water at 24-40 degrees C. Cooling of the skin by 2-6 degrees C increased the rate of whole body oxygen consumption (.V(O(2)) and triggered electromyographic (EMG) activity recorded from the neck or femoral muscles. The cooling-induced (.V(O(2)) responses did not depend on core (colonic) temperature and followed skin temperature in a graded manner. Pretreatment with the beta-blocker propranolol (10 mg kg(-1), i.v.) greatly attenuated the (.V(O(2)) response but did not affect the EMG response. On the other hand, pretreatment with the muscle relaxant pancuronium bromide (2 mg kg(-1), i.v.) affected the (.V(O(2)) response very slightly but completely abolished the EMG activity. Accordingly, the cooling stimulus activated mainly non-shivering thermogenesis. Next, the contribution of the cerebral cortex to the cooling-induced thermogenesis was examined. Power spectral analysis of the electroencephalogram (EEG) showed that the cooling stimulus largely inhibited delta (0.5-3 Hz) waves, enhanced theta (3-8 Hz) waves, and slightly increased frequencies higher than 8 Hz. Pinching the hindpaw elicited changes in EEG similar to those elicited by skin cooling but did not increase the (.V(O(2)). Therefore, there was no relationship between changes in the EEG and the magnitude of thermogenesis. Finally, skin cooling increased the (.V(O(2)) of decorticated rats but did not increase that of decerebrated rats. The results suggest that the subcortical forebrain structure, but not cortical activation, is indispensable for non-shivering thermogenesis elicited by cooling stimulation of the skin.
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- 2004
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15. Ventromedial hypothalamus lesions induce jejunal epithelial cell hyperplasia through an increase in gene expression of cyclooxygenase
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Y Endo, Tsutomu Hirano, Toshimasa Osaka, Haruaki Kageyama, Asako Kageyama, Kiyomitsu Nemoto, Seiji Shioda, Y Namba, and Shuji Inoue
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Hypothalamus, Middle ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Lesion ,Intestinal mucosa ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Hyperplasia ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Membrane Proteins ,Blotting, Northern ,medicine.disease ,Small intestine ,Epithelium ,Rats ,Isoenzymes ,Jejunum ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cyclooxygenase 2 ,Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases ,Hypothalamus ,Cyclooxygenase 1 ,biology.protein ,Female ,Cyclooxygenase ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
We demonstrated that ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) lesions facilitate DNA synthesis, which reflects cell proliferation in abdominal organs, including the liver, pancreas, stomach, small intestine and large intestine, all of which are amply innervated by the vagal nerve.To investigate which area DNA synthesis facilitates and what factors contribute to cell proliferation in the small intestine in VMH-lesioned rats.At 7 days after VMH lesions or sham operations, a segment of rat jejunum was taken for histological examination. A part of the jejunum was also removed from VMH-lesioned and sham-operated rats after 3 days and examined for 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation. At 6, 12 and 24 h after VMH lesions, the proximal intestine was removed from individual rats, from the pylorus to the mid-jejunum. Total RNA was extracted from these tissues of each rat, and the levels of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and transforming growth factor (TGF)-alpha mRNA were determined using reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Cyclooxygenase (COX)-1 and -2 mRNA levels were determined using Northern blotting.: Jejunal villi in VMH-lesioned rats were markedly enlarged compared to those of sham-operated rats and jejunal crypts in VMH-lesioned rats more markedly incorporated BrdU. Northern blot analysis revealed an increase in COX-1 mRNA after 6, 12 and 24 h in the jejunum of VMH-lesioned rats. COX-2 mRNA was decreased 6 and 12 h after VMH lesioning; however, it was significantly increased 24 h after VMH lesions in comparison to sham-operated rats. The levels of EGF and TGF-alpha mRNA were unchanged in VMH lesioned rats.VMH lesions induced enlargement of jejunal villi and increased the gene expression of COX-1 in the small intestine. Prostaglandins, probably E(2), induced by COX-1 may be one candidate factor responsible for the cell proliferation of the small intestinal epithelium in these rats.
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- 2003
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16. Fasting increases gene expressions of uncoupling proteins and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ in brown adipose tissue of ventromedial hypothalamus-lesioned rats
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Asako Kageyama, Teruo Kawada, Seiji Shioda, Toshimasa Osaka, Jun Oka, Shuji Inoue, Tsutomu Hirano, Haruaki Kageyama, Masakazu Miura, Yoshio Namba, and Daniel Ricquier
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear ,Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor ,Biology ,Ion Channels ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Adipose Tissue, Brown ,Internal medicine ,Brown adipose tissue ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Uncoupling Protein 3 ,Uncoupling Protein 2 ,Northern blot ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Receptor ,Uncoupling Protein 1 ,UCP3 ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Uncoupling Agents ,Body Weight ,Membrane Proteins ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Proteins ,Fasting ,General Medicine ,Rats ,Oxygen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,chemistry ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Hypothalamus ,Female ,Carrier Proteins ,Thermogenesis ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are supposed to be involved in diet-induced thermogenesis. Their activities are usually elevated by feeding and reduced by fasting in normal animals. To investigate whether fasting affects the expression of UCPs mRNA in brown adipose tissue (BAT) of bilateral ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)-lesioned rats, we determined the gene expression of UCP1, UCP2 or UCP3 in BAT of VMH-lesioned rats and examined oxygen consumption in these rats under fed or 48-h fasted conditions. Northern blotting revealed no difference in the expression of UCPs mRNA in BAT between VMH-lesioned and sham-operated rats under the fed condition, however, expressions were increased markedly in BAT of VMH-lesioned rats under the fasted condition. Under the fed condition, no difference in oxygen consumption was observed between VMH-lesioned and sham-operated rats. Under the fasted condition, oxygen consumption decreased in both rats, however, it decreased in VMH-lesioned less than in sham operated rats. To explore the mechanism that fasting elevated BAT UCPs mRNA in VMH-lesioned rats, we measured peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-gamma mRNA and protein in BAT, because PPAR-gamma agonist can elevate UCPs mRNA levels in BAT. Under the fed condition, no differences in the expression of PPAR-gamma mRNA and protein content were observed between in BAT of VMH-lesioned and sham-operated rats. Under the fasted condition, however, both increased in BAT of VMH-lesioned rats. These results suggest that VMH-lesions enhance the gene expression of UCPs in BAT under long-term fasting as a defensive reaction to inhibit the reduction of body temperature through an increase in PPAR-gamma activity.
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- 2003
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17. Criteria and classification of obesity in Japan and Asia-Oceania
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Masao Kanazawa, Nobuo Yoshiike, Toshimasa Osaka, Shuji Inoue, Paul Zimmet, and Yoshio Numba
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Gerontology ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Overweight ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Classification of obesity ,Diabetes mellitus ,Hyperlipidemia ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Overeating ,business ,Thermogenesis ,Demography - Abstract
In 1997 when WHO initiated the formation of the International Obesity Task Force (IOTF), the Task Force proposed the cut-offs for overweight and obesity as BMI 25 and BMI 30, respectively. If we accept the criteria of BMI ≥ 30 to indicate obesity, it would appear that the prevalence of obesity in Japan of less than 3% has changed little during the last 40 years, and we cannot explain the rapid increase in incidence of obesity-associated chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and hyperlipidemia. Thus, JASSO decided to define BMI ≥ 25 as obesity. This cut-off has been proposed for use in the Asia-Oceania Region, and WHO Western Pacific Region noted this proposal. According to this criterion the prevalence of obesity in Japan would average 20%, with a high of 30% in men over 30 years old, and women over 40 years old. Thus the rates would have increased four times in men and three times in women during these last 40 years. What has caused the increased prevalence of obesity in Japan? Several causes of obesity have been advanced: (i) overeating (ii) errors of eating pattern (iii) inactivity (iv) heredity, and (v) disturbance in thermogenesis. Hyperphagia and inactivity are two major risk factors for obesity. Hyperphagia may be an important factor in individuals. However, the average energy intake in adult people in Japan has not increased; in fact it has declined (2104 kcal/day to 1967 kcal/day) during these 40 years. During this period, the prevalence of obesity has increased three or more times as mentioned above. This indicates that inactivity may be the main cause for the increased incidence of obesity in Japan. Errors of eating pattern (irregular eating, night eating, etc.), including a high proportion of fat to total energy intake (8.7% increased to 26.5%), and a high incidence of β 3-adrenergic polymorphism, might also have contributed to the increased incidence of obesity in Japan.
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- 2002
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18. Energy expenditure by intracerebroventricular administration of orexin to anesthetized rats
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Toshimasa Osaka, Shuji Inoue, and Jian Wang
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Food intake ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuropeptide ,Energy homeostasis ,Body Temperature ,Arousal ,Oxygen Consumption ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Saline ,Injections, Intraventricular ,Orexins ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Neuropeptides ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Rats ,Orexin ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Energy expenditure ,Carrier Proteins ,Energy Metabolism ,psychological phenomena and processes ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
Orexin-A and -B are hypothalamic neuropeptides that have been implicated in stimulating food intake and maintaining arousal. Because food intake is closely related to the control of energy homeostasis, we examined the effects of intracerebroventricular administration of orexins on O 2 consumption (VO 2 ), an index of energy expenditure, body temperature, skin temperature and heart rate (HR) in urethane-anesthetized rats. VO 2 increased significantly after an orexin-A injection, and this increase was accompanied by a significant tachycardiac response. Orexin-B also increased VO 2 and HR, although orexin-A was ~30 times more potent in eliciting these responses than orexin-B. The effects of orexin-A were dose dependent over the range of 1 pmol–1 nmol, whereas an injection of the saline vehicle had no effect. These findings suggest that centrally acting orexin-A functions to increase energy expenditure.
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- 2001
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19. Effects of the capsaicin analogue resiniferatoxin on thermoregulation in anesthetized rats
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Naoko Okane, Shuichi Kimura, Shuji Inoue, Akiko Kobayashi, and Toshimasa Osaka
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sympathetic nervous system ,Physiology ,Chemistry ,Resiniferatoxin ,Antagonist ,Propranolol ,Thermoregulation ,Hypothermia ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Capsaicin ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Thermogenesis ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
(1) Administration of resiniferatoxin (RTX; 50 μg/kg, s.c.) induced triphasic metabolic responses with immediate facilitation followed by transitory inhibition and subsequent long-lasting facilitation in urethan-anesthetized rats. The temperature of skin increased immediately after the RTX injection, suggesting cutaneous vasodilation and heat loss. The colonic temperature decreased initially and then increased above the baseline level. (2) Pretreatment with ruthenium red, a putative vanilloid receptor (VN 2 ) antagonist, attenuated the RTX-induced heat loss and inhibition of heat production. (3) Adrenal demedullation selectively attenuated the RTX-induced immediate thermogenesis, and the β -blocker propranolol prevented both phases of thermogenesis. Thus, the sympathetic nervous system and adrenaline contributed to the thermogenic responses.
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- 2001
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20. Thermogenesis mediated by a capsaicin-sensitive area in the ventrolateral medulla
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Shuichi Kimura, Toshimasa Osaka, Shuji Inoue, Tai Hee Lee, and Akiko Kobayashi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Central nervous system ,Efferent Pathways ,Body Temperature ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oxygen Consumption ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Sympathoadrenal system ,Rats, Wistar ,Microinjection ,Medulla ,Neurons ,Medulla Oblongata ,Chemistry ,Reticular Formation ,General Neuroscience ,Thermogenesis ,Rostral ventrolateral medulla ,Denervation ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Spinal Cord ,Capsaicin ,Anesthesia ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Brainstem - Abstract
Systemic administration of capsaicin elicits heat production, which can be observed in decerebrated preparations but is blocked by spinal transection. To identify the critical locus involved in the capsaicin-induced thermogenesis in the brainstem, we studied the effect of capsaicin on rats with bilateral electrolytic lesions in the premotor areas of sympathoadrenal preganglionic neurons. Lesions in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), but not in other regions, largely attenuated the capsaicin-induced heat production. Unilateral microinjection of 30-100 nl capsaicin (0.5%, w/v) into the RVLM elicited a heat production response, whereas capsaicin injection in neighboring areas or vehicle injection into the RVLM did not affect heat production. These results suggest that the thermogenic effect of capsaicin is mediated, at least in part, by some capsaicin-sensitive structure in the RVLM.
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- 2000
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21. Effects of fructose and glucose on plasma leptin, insulin, and insulin resistance in lean and VMH-lesioned obese rats
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Asako Suga, Tsutomu Hirano, Masatomi Tsuji, Masakazu Miura, Shuji Inoue, Toshimasa Osaka, Mitsuru Adachi, Haruaki Kageyama, and Yoshio Namba
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Blood Glucose ,Leptin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adipose tissue ,Fructose ,Biology ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Insulin resistance ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Dietary Carbohydrates ,medicine ,Hyperinsulinemia ,Animals ,Insulin ,Obesity ,Glucose tolerance test ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Body Weight ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,medicine.disease ,Diet ,Rats ,Glucose ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Area Under Curve ,Female ,Insulin Resistance ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
To determine the influence of dietary fructose and glucose on circulating leptin levels in lean and obese rats, plasma leptin concentrations were measured in ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH)-lesioned obese and sham-operated lean rats fed either normal chow or fructose- or glucose-enriched diets (60% by calories) for 2 wk. Insulin resistance was evaluated by the steady-state plasma glucose method and intravenous glucose tolerance test. In lean rats, glucose-enriched diet significantly increased plasma leptin with enlarged parametrial fat pad, whereas neither leptin nor fat-pad weight was altered by fructose. Two weeks after the lesions, the rats fed normal chow had marked greater body weight gain, enlarged fat pads, and higher insulin and leptin compared with sham-operated rats. Despite a marked adiposity and hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance was not increased in VMH-lesioned rats. Fructose brought about substantial insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia in both lean and obese rats, whereas glucose led to rather enhanced insulin sensitivity. Leptin, body weight, and fat pad were not significantly altered by either fructose or glucose in the obese rats. These results suggest that dietary glucose stimulates leptin production by increasing adipose tissue or stimulating glucose metabolism in lean rats. Hyperleptinemia in VMH-lesioned rats is associated with both increased adiposity and hyperinsulinemia but not with insulin resistance. Dietary fructose does not alter leptin levels, although this sugar brings about hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, suggesting that hyperinsulinemia compensated for insulin resistance does not stimulate leptin production.
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- 2000
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22. Lack of Integrative Control of Body Temperature after Capsaicin Administration
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Tai Hee Lee, Shuji Inoue, Yoshio Namba, Jae Woo Lee, Toshimasa Osaka, Akiko Kobayashi, and Shuichi Kimura
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Vasodilation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Heating pad ,Oxygen Consumption ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Animals ,Body temperature ,Rats, Wistar ,Saline ,Decerebrate State ,business.industry ,Heat loss ,Brain ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Decerebration ,chemistry ,Capsaicin ,Hypothalamus ,Anesthesia ,Systemic administration ,Original Article ,business ,Heat production ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Background Body temperature is usually regulated by opposing controls of heat production and heat loss. However, systemic administration of capsaicin, the pungent ingredient of hot peppers, facilitated heat production and heat loss simultaneously in rats. We recently found that the capsaicin-induced heat loss and heat production occur simultaneously and that the biphasic change in body temperature is a sum of transient heat loss and long-lasting heat production. Moreover, suppression of the heat loss response did not affect capsaicin-induced heat production and suppression of heat production did not affect capsaicin-induced heat loss. These observations suggest the independent peripheral mechanisms of capsaicin-induced thermal responses. Thus, the capsaicin-induced thermal responses apparently lack an integrated control. Methods Male Wistar rats were maintained at an ambient temperature of 24 +/- 1 degrees C on a 12 h on-off lighting schedule at least for two weeks before the experiments. They were anesthetized with urethane (1.5 g/kg, i.p.) and placed on a heating pad, which was kept between 29 and 30 degrees C. Skin temperature(Ts) was measured with a small thermistor, which was taped to the dorsal surface of the rat's tail, to assess vasoactive changes indirectly. Colonic temperature(Tc) was measured with another thermistor inserted about 60 mm into the anus. O2 consumption was measured by the open-circuit method, and values were corrected for metabolic body size (kg0.75). Capsaicin (Sigma) was dissolved in a solution comprising 80% saline, 10% Tween 80, and 10% ethanol, and injected subcutaneously at a dose of 5 mg/kg. Each rat received a single injection of capsaicin because repeated administration of capsaicin renders an animal insensitive to the subsequent administration of capsaicin. Laminectomy was performed at the level of the first and second cervical vertebrae to expose the cervical spinal cord for sectioning. The brain was transected at 4-mm rostral from the interaural line with an L-shaped knife. Results After administration of capsaicin, O2 consumption increased from 13.5 +/- 0.4 mL/min/kg0.75 at 0 min to a peak of 15.9 +/- 0.4 mL/min/kg0.75 at 71 min and gradually declined but remained higher than the basal value until the end of the 4-h observation period. Ts also immediately increased from 27.7 +/- 0.2 degrees C to 31.9 +/- 0.3 degrees C at 39 min, and it returned to the baseline level within 90 min after the capsaicin administration. Tc initially decreased from 37.1 +/- 0.1 degrees C to 36.8 +/- 0.2 degrees C at 43 min and then gradually increased over the baseline level and remained at 37.6 +/- 0.2 degrees C until the end of the experiment. In spinalized rats, the capsaicin-induced increases in O2 consumption was largely attenuated, while the basal O2 consumption was similar to that of control rats. The basal Ts of spinalized rats was 32.4 +/- 0.3 degrees C, which was higher than that of control rats. Capsaicin increased Ts by less than 1 degree C, and Tc did not change after the capsaicin administration. O2 consumption of decerebrated rats was statistically higher than that of control rats after the injection of capsaicin. However, capsaicin did not increase Ts, showing a lack of a vasodilatory response. Decerebration between the hypothalamus and midbrain prevented the capsaicin-induced heat loss but not the heat production response. Conclusion These results show that the capsaicin-induced heat production and heat loss are controlled separately by the brainstem and by the forebrain, respectively, and suggest that the body temperature regulation is performed without an integrative center.
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- 2000
23. CGRP microinjection into the ventromedial or dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus activates heat production
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Shuichi Kimura, Yoshio Namba, Shuji Inoue, Toshimasa Osaka, and Akiko Kobayashi
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Male ,Agonist ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hot Temperature ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Microinjections ,medicine.drug_class ,Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide ,Dorsomedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Neuropeptide ,Calcitonin gene-related peptide ,Oxygen Consumption ,Adipose Tissue, Brown ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus ,Molecular Biology ,Microinjection ,Brain Chemistry ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Peptide Fragments ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,Stria terminalis ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Hypothalamus ,Neurology (clinical) ,Miotics ,Body Temperature Regulation ,Receptors, Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Unilateral microinjection of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP, 1.6 pmol; 0.2 microl) into the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) and dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) immediately increased oxygen consumption (VO2), heart rate (HR), colonic temperature (Tco), and temperature of interscapular brown adipose tissue (TIBAT) in urethane-anesthetized rats, whereas vehicle saline injection into the VMH and CGRP injection into other hypothalamic regions such as the preoptic area, lateral hypothalamic area, paraventricular nucleus, and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis had no effect. The effects of CGRP injection into the VMH were dose-dependent over the range of 0.016-1.6 pmol. CGRP administration to the lateral ventricle (LV) required 16-320 pmol to elicit similar degrees of responses that were observed after the injection into the VMH. The increase in TIBAT was always higher than that in Tco after CGRP injection. Injection of [Cys(ACM)2,7]hCGRPalpha, a selective CGRP2 receptor agonist, did not induce any thermogenic effects. Human CGRP8-37, a proposed CGRP1 receptor antagonist, by itself induced heat production responses with no signs of inhibition of CGRP-induced responses. Thus, the receptor subtype of the thermogenic effect of CGRP could not be determined by the available pharmacological tools. The present results show that centrally administrated CGRP induces heat production in the BAT specifically through the VMH or DMH.
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- 1999
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24. Plasma leptin levels and triglyceride secretion rates in VMH-lesioned obese rats: a role of adiposity
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Masatomi Tsuji, Toshimasa Osaka, Tsutomu Hirano, Mitsuru Adachi, Masakazu Miura, Asako Suga, Yoshio Namba, and Shuji Inoue
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Leptin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adipose tissue ,Biology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,NEFA ,Insulin resistance ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hyperinsulinemia ,Animals ,Insulin ,Obesity ,Triglycerides ,Triglyceride ,Body Weight ,Hypertriglyceridemia ,Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Adipose Tissue ,chemistry ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Insulin Resistance - Abstract
To explore the role of adiposity on hypertriglyceridemia associated with obesity, we examined the relation between triglyceride secretion rate (TGSR) and plasma leptin, insulin, or insulin resistance in ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)-lesioned rats in the dynamic and static phases (2 and 14 wk after lesions, respectively). VMH-lesioned rats gained body weight (BW) at fivefold higher rates in the dynamic phase compared with sham-operated control (sham) rats, and BW gain reached a plateau in the static phase. Parametrial fat pad mass was increased 2.5-fold in VMH-lesioned rats compared with sham rats in both phases. Leptin levels were sixfold higher in VMH-lesioned rats of the dynamic phase and even higher in the static phase. Insulin levels were twofold higher in VMH-lesioned rats than in sham rats in both phases. In the dynamic phase, VMH-lesioned rats had 2-fold higher plasma triglyceride (TG) levels and 2.6-fold higher TGSRs, whereas steady-state plasma glucose (SSPG) values, an indicator of insulin resistance, were lower. SSPG values became significantly higher in VMH-lesioned rats in the static phase, but TGSR was not further accelerated. TGSR was significantly associated with leptin, independent of insulin. Leptin was highly correlated with BW, fat mass, and nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA). These results suggest that adiposity itself plays a critical role in TGSR probably through increased NEFA flux from enlarged adipose tissues. Insulin resistance is not associated with the overproduction of TG in this animal model for obesity.
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- 1999
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25. Temperature- and capsaicin-sensitive nerve fibers in brown adipose tissue attenuate thermogenesis in the rat
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Shuji Inoue, Akiko Kobayashi, Shuichi Kimura, Yoshio Namba, Osamu Ezaki, Tai Hee Lee, and Toshimasa Osaka
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hot Temperature ,Physiology ,Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Substance P ,Calcitonin gene-related peptide ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Norepinephrine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nerve Fibers ,Adipose Tissue, Brown ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Brown adipose tissue ,medicine ,Animals ,Denervation ,Chemistry ,Rats ,Nociception ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Capsaicin ,Female ,Capsazepine ,Thermogenesis ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
We examined the function of putative sensory fibers that are contained in intercostal nerves and innervate interscapular brown adipose tissue (IBAT) in urethane-anesthetized rats. Warming the IBAT to 40-44 degrees C with two small heaters placed bilaterally on the skin above it attenuated the subsequent noradrenaline-induced thermogenesis (NIT) of the IBAT. In this range of warming, higher IBAT temperatures resulted in more attenuation. Denervation of IBAT blocked the effect of thermal stimulation on the NIT. Thus, activation of nerve fibers in IBAT that are sensitive to warmth or to the nociceptive effects of heat probably attenuated the NIT. Since the putative sensory fibers in the IBAT contain calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P, which are thought to act in peripheral tissues, we tested the effects of injection of these neuropeptides into the IBAT. Administration of 5.2 nmol CGRP but not substance P or vehicle saline mimicked the effect of thermal stimulation of IBAT. As the neuropeptide-containing primary sensory neurons are characterized by their sensitivity to capsaicin, we also tested its effects (1 mg/kg, s.c.) and found that it also attenuated the NIT. Denervation of the IBAT or pretreatment with capsazepine, a capsaicin receptor antagonist, blocked the effect of capsaicin. We propose that temperature- and capsaicin-sensitive nerve fibers release CGRP to attenuate the NIT of brown adipocytes.
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- 1998
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26. A novel apparatus that permits multiple routes for infusions and body-fluid collections in a freely-moving animal
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Hitoshi Matsumura, Toshimasa Osaka, Osamu Hayaishi, Gotaro Kinoshita, and Shinsuke Satoh
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Microdialysis ,Controller (computing) ,Acoustics ,Instrumentation ,Drinking ,Motor Activity ,Rotation ,Specimen Handling ,law.invention ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Eating ,law ,Fluid leakage ,Animals ,Torque ,Simulation ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Physics ,Electromyography ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,Commutator (electric) ,Housing, Animal ,Electric Stimulation ,Electrical contacts ,Body Fluids ,Rats ,Perfusion ,Stepper motor ,Sleep - Abstract
A novel apparatus is described for simultaneous performance of multi-channel infusions/body-fluid collections and multichannel electrical recordings/stimulations in a freely behaving animal. This apparatus consists of a cylindrical cage and other devices described below. Electrical contacts are achieved via a slip-ring commutator. A rotation detector detects the turning of the animal in the cage, and a controller rotates the floor under the animal in the opposite direction by means of a stepping motor. Thus, excessive twisting of the fluid tubing between the animal and experimental equipment is released by rotation of the floor. Floor rotation starts when the animal turns in either direction and exceeds a preset number of rotations. When the turning exceeds certain rates, the floor is rotated with higher angular velocities. This floor rotation little affected sleep-wake activities, brain temperature, food and water intake, and general behavior of the rat. Thus, multi-channel fluid routes have been realized; and by excluding the swivel apparatus from the fluid lines, advantages such as no fluid leakage at the swivel, no extra dead volume, and low torque to rotate the device have been gained.
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- 1995
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27. Hypoxia-induced hypothermia mediated by the glutamatergic transmission in the lateral preoptic area
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Toshimasa Osaka
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Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glutamic Acid ,Hypothermia ,Biology ,Kynurenic Acid ,Nitric Oxide ,Synaptic Transmission ,Body Temperature ,Glutamatergic ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Norepinephrine ,Kynurenic acid ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Anesthesia ,Glutamate receptor antagonist ,Rats, Wistar ,Hypoxia ,General Neuroscience ,Glutamate receptor ,Thermoregulation ,Carbon Dioxide ,Preoptic Area ,Respiration, Artificial ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Hypothalamus ,medicine.symptom ,Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists - Abstract
Hypoxia evokes a regulated decrease in the body core temperature, which response is mediated, at least in part, by noradrenaline (NA) and nitric oxide (NO) in the rostromedial preoptic area (POA) of the hypothalamus. In the accompanying paper, it was shown that glutamatergic activation of the lateral POA also evokes hypothermic responses. Here, I tested the hypothesis that the glutamatergic transmission in the lateral POA is critically involved in the neural mechanism of hypoxia-induced hypothermia. Hypoxic ventilation (10% O(2)-90% N(2), 5 min) as well as a single microinjection of NA (50 pmol) or the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (8.4 nmol) into the rostromedial POA evoked an increase in the tail skin temperature and a decrease in the colonic temperature in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked, artificially ventilated rats. All of these responses were greatly attenuated by pretreatment with multiple microinjections of kynurenic acid (10 nmol, four locations), a nonselective glutamate receptor antagonist, but not by those with saline solution, in the bilateral rostral and central parts of the lateral POA. These results suggest that the NA- and NO-sensitive structure in the rostromedial POA activated the glutamatergic transmission in the lateral POA to mediate hypoxia-induced hypothermia.
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- 2012
28. Cell proliferation in visceral organs induced by ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesions: Development of electrical VMH lesions in mice and resulting pathophysiological profiles
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Yoshiko Kasahara, Noriko Ishizuka, Yoko Suzuki, Mikiko Kishi, Hiroyuki Shimizu, Toshimasa Osaka, Nobuo Imazeki, Shuji Inoue, Akira Senoo, Yoko Kobayashi, Tosei Takahashi, and Katsumi Arai
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Leptin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biology ,Eating ,Mice ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Electrocoagulation ,Endocrine system ,Animals ,Insulin ,Regeneration ,Obesity ,Pancreas ,Cell Proliferation ,Cell growth ,Stomach ,Lipids ,Pathophysiology ,Small intestine ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Female - Abstract
We have found that ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesions produced by electrocoagulation induce cell proliferation in visceral organs through vagal hyperactivity, and also stimulate regeneration of partially resected liver in rats. To facilitate identification of proliferative and/or regenerative factors at the gene level, we developed electrical production of VMH lesions in mice, for which more genetic information is available compared to rats, and examined the pathophysiological profiles in these mice. Using ddy mice, we produced VMH lesions with reference to the previously reported method in rats. We then examined the pathophysiological profiles of the VMH-lesioned mice. Electrical VMH lesions in mice were produced using the following coordinates: 1.6 mm posterior to the bregma, anteriorly; 0.5 mm lateral to the midsagittal line, transversely; and 0.2 mm above the base of the skull, vertically, with 1 mA of current intensity and 10 s duration. The VMH-lesioned mice showed similar metabolic characteristics to those of VMH-lesioned rats, including body weight gain, increased food intake, increased percentage body fat, and elevated serum insulin and leptin. However, there were some differences in short period of hyperphagia, and in normal serum lipids compared to those of VMH-lesioned rats. The mice showed a similar cell proliferation in visceral organs, including stomach, small intestine, liver, and, exocrine and endocrine pancreas. In conclusion, procedures for development of VMH lesions in mice by electrocoagulation were developed and the VMH-lesioned mice showed pathophysiological profiles similar to those of VMH-lesioned rats, particularly in cell proliferation in visceral organs. These findings have not been observed previously in gold thioglucose-induced VMH-lesioned mice. This model may be a new tool for identifying factors involved in cell proliferation or regeneration in visceral organs.
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- 2011
29. Hypoxia-induced hypothermia mediated by noradrenaline and nitric oxide in the rostromedial preoptic area
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Toshimasa Osaka
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Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,Hypothermia ,Biology ,Nitric Oxide ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Norepinephrine ,Internal medicine ,Prazosin ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Hypoxia ,Microinjection ,General Neuroscience ,Carotid sinus ,Thermoregulation ,Preoptic Area ,Chemoreceptor Cells ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Carotid Sinus ,chemistry ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.drug ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Central nitric oxide (NO) has an important role in hypothermia induced by hypoxia as well as in that elicited by noradrenaline (NA) microinjected into the rostromedial preoptic area (POA) of the hypothalamus. Here, I tested the hypothesis that activation of adrenoceptors and NO in the rostromedial POA is involved in hypoxia-induced hypothermia in urethane–chloralose-anesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked, artificially ventilated rats. Hypoxic ventilation (10% O 2 –90% N 2 , 5 min) evoked an increase in the tail skin temperature and a decrease in the colonic temperature, though these changes occurred at 30 s to 7 min after returning the rats to ventilation with room air. These responses were eliminated by prior bilateral transection of the carotid sinus nerves, but not by bilateral cervical vagotomy, suggesting the involvement of activated carotid chemoreceptors in the hypoxic ventilation-induced hypothermia. Such responses were also greatly attenuated by the microinjection of an NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor, N G -monomethyl- l -arginine ( l -NMMA, 25 nmol), but not by that of its inactive enantiomer, N G -monomethyl- d -arginine ( d -NMMA, 25 nmol), into the NA-sensitive, hypothermia-inducing site in the rostromedial POA. Pretreatment with the α 1 -adrenoceptor blocker prazosin (50 pmol), but not vehicle saline, also greatly attenuated the hypoxic ventilation-induced heat loss responses. These results suggest that this hypoxia-induced hypothermia was mediated, at least in part, by activation of α 1 -adrenoceptors and NOS in the rostromedial POA.
- Published
- 2010
30. Intraperitoneal administration of recombinant human interleukin-1β inhibits osmotic thirst in the rat
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Yoichi Ueta, Seiichiro Kawano, Hiroshi Yamashita, Toshimasa Osaka, and Hiroshi Kannan
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Indomethacin ,Intraperitoneal injection ,Drinking ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Thirst ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Subcutaneous injection ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Beta (finance) ,Saline ,computer.programming_language ,Saline Solution, Hypertonic ,sed ,business.industry ,Angiotensin II ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,Recombinant Proteins ,Rats ,Hypertonic saline ,Endocrinology ,Taste ,medicine.symptom ,business ,computer ,Interleukin-1 - Abstract
Decrease in water intake after intraperitoneal injection of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) was studied in the rat. Administration of IL-1 beta at a dose of 20 micrograms/kg attenuated osmotic thirst induced by intraperitoneal injection of hypertonic saline, but did not affect hypovolemic thirst induced by subcutaneous injection of either polyethylene glycol or angiotensin II. Interleukin-1 beta also decreased spontaneous intake of water but not that of 1.8% saline. The results suggest that the decrease in water intake by IL-1 beta is caused, at least in part, by suppression of osmotic thirst but not by general suppression of behavior. The effects of IL-1 beta were not secondary responses accompanied by feeding behavior, since food supply was removed during the experiments. Pretreatment with indomethacin blocked the decrease in water intake by IL-1 beta, suggesting the involvement of production of prostaglandins.
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- 1992
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31. Nitric oxide mediates noradrenaline-induced hypothermic responses and opposes prostaglandin E2-induced fever in the rostromedial preoptic area
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Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Male ,Nitroprusside ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,Fever ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypothermia ,Biology ,Nitric Oxide ,Dinoprostone ,Nitric oxide ,Body Temperature ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Norepinephrine ,Oxygen Consumption ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Nitric Oxide Donors ,Prostaglandin E2 ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Rats, Wistar ,Microinjection ,omega-N-Methylarginine ,General Neuroscience ,Thermoregulation ,Preoptic Area ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Sodium nitroprusside ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Prostaglandin E ,medicine.drug ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Noradrenaline (NA) microinjected into the rostromedial preoptic area (POA) elicits heat loss responses and opposes prostaglandin E 2 -induced fever. Here, I tested the hypothesis that local synthesis and release of nitric oxide (NO) mediates the NA-induced effects. The unilateral microinjection of the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 8.4 nmol), but not that of saline solution, into the NA-sensitive site elicited an increase in tail skin temperature and decreases in the whole-body O 2 consumption rate, heart rate, and colonic temperature simultaneously in urethane–chloralose-anesthetized rats. Pretreatment with SNP greatly attenuated the thermogenic, tachycardic, and hyperthermic effects of prostaglandin E 2 (140 fmol) microinjected into the same site. Furthermore, the NA-induced hypothermic responses were largely blocked by a prior microinjection of an NO synthase inhibitor N G -monomethyl- l -arginine ( l -NMMA, 5 nmol), but not by that of its inactive enantiomer, N G -monomethyl- d -arginine ( d -NMMA, 5 nmol), at the same site. These results suggest that the hypothermic and antipyretic effects of NA are mediated by NO in the rostromedial POA.
- Published
- 2009
32. Regulation of Energy Homeostasis by GALP
- Author
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Masamitsu Nakazato, Toshimasa Osaka, Fumiko Takenoya, Seiji Shioda, Yukari Date, Yasuhiko Minokoshi, and Haruaki Kageyama
- Subjects
endocrine system ,GalP ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Neuropeptide ,Biology ,Energy homeostasis ,Cell biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Hypothalamus ,Arcuate nucleus ,Galanin-like peptide ,biology.protein ,Biological neural network ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Hormone - Abstract
The hypothalamus plays very important roles in regulation of feeding behavior, energy metabolism and reproduction. Galanin-like peptide (GALP) was discovered in porcine hypothalamus and has 60 amino acid peptide and a non-amidated C-terminus. GALP is shown to be produced in neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. GALP-producing neurons make neuronal networks with several feeding-related peptide-containing neurons in the hypothalamus. Since GALP controls food intake and energy balance, it is assumed that GALP is an important neuropeptide to regulate body weight. Furthermore, GALP is known to regulate plasma LH levels through activation of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-producing neurons in the hypothalamus, suggesting that GALP plays some important roles in the reproductive system. This review will attempt to summarize the research on these topics especially on energy metabolism and reproduction.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Effects of gastric vagotomy on visceral cell proliferation induced by ventromedial hypothalamic lesions: role of vagal hyperactivity
- Author
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Akira Niijima, Seiji Shioda, Takenoya Fumiko, Yuri Kintaka, Shuji Inoue, Takeo Hashiguchi, Toshimasa Osaka, Yoko Suzuki, and Haruaki Kageyama
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mitotic index ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biology ,Vagotomy ,Ulcer index ,Gastric Acid ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Internal medicine ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Animals ,Pancreas ,Cell Proliferation ,Cell growth ,Stomach ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Vagus Nerve ,General Medicine ,digestive system diseases ,Small intestine ,Vagus nerve ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,Gastric Mucosa ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Gastric acid - Abstract
In rats, ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesions induce cell proliferation in the visceral organs (stomach, small intestine, liver, and pancreas) due to hyperactivity of the vagus nerve. To investigate the effects of selective gastric vagotomy on VMH lesion-induced cell proliferation and secretion of gastric acid, we assessed the mitotic index (the number of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-immunopositive cells per 1,000 cells in the gastric mucosal cell layer) and measured the volume of secreted basal gastric acid. Furthermore, to explore whether or not ethanol-induced acute gastric mucosal lesions (AGML) lead to ulcer formation in VMH-lesioned rats, we assessed the ulcer index of both sham-operated and VMH-lesioned rats after administration of ethanol. VMH lesions resulted in an increased mitotic index and thickness of the gastric mucosal cell layer and gave rise to the hypersecretion of gastric acid. Selective gastric vagotomy restored these parameters to normal without affecting cell proliferation in other visceral organs. Ethanol-induced AGML caused ulcers in sham VMH-lesioned rats, whereas VMH-lesioned rats were less likely to exhibit such ulcers. These results suggest that VMH lesion-induced vagally mediated cell proliferation in the visceral organs is associated with hyperfunction in these organs, and VMH lesion-induced resistance to ethanol may be due to thickening of the gastric mucosal cell layer resulting from cell proliferation in the gastric mucosa—this in turn is due to hyperactivity of the vagus nerve.
- Published
- 2008
34. Central and peripheral administration of amylin induces energy expenditure in anesthetized rats
- Author
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Shuji Inoue, Toshimasa Osaka, Yu Koyama, and Ayako Tsukamoto
- Subjects
Agonist ,Calcitonin ,Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Amyloid ,Time Factors ,endocrine system diseases ,Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,Amylin ,macromolecular substances ,Propranolol ,Peptide hormone ,Biochemistry ,Body Temperature ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Endocrinology ,Oxygen Consumption ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Injections, Intraventricular ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Chemistry ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,Area postrema ,Islet Amyloid Polypeptide ,Rats ,Postprandial ,Injections, Intravenous ,Energy Metabolism ,Thermogenesis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Amylin is a peptide hormone that is co-released with insulin from pancreatic beta-cells following a meal. Intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of amylin (1-100 pmol), or an amylin agonist, salmon calcitonin, elicited dose-dependent thermogenic, tachycardic, and hyperthermic responses in urethane-anesthetized rats. Intravenous (iv) administration of higher doses of amylin (100 pmol-20 nmol) also induced similar responses, although the amplitudes of these responses were significantly smaller than those elicited by icv administration, suggesting the primary action of amylin to be in the brain. However, the iv administration of amylin induced the responses slightly faster than the icv injection, the former responses occurring
- Published
- 2007
35. Prostaglandin E(2) fever mediated by inhibition of the GABAergic transmission in the region immediately adjacent to the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis
- Author
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Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Agonist ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fever ,Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Hypothalamus ,Prostaglandin ,Biology ,Bicuculline ,Synaptic Transmission ,Dinoprostone ,Body Temperature ,GABA Antagonists ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Heart Rate ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Microinjection ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Lamina terminalis ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,GABAA receptor ,Muscimol ,Preoptic Area ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,Pyridazines ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Vasoconstriction ,Gabazine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Unilateral microinjection of prostaglandin (PG)E(2) into a region immediately adjacent to the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (peri-OVLT) in the preoptic area elicited thermogenic, tachycardic, cutaneous vasoconstrictive, and hyperthermic responses simultaneously in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized rats. The magnitude of these responses increased dose-dependently over the range of 57 fmol-2.8 pmol, except for the vasoconstrictive response. Microinjection of a GABA(A) receptor antagonist, bicuculline methiodide or gabazine (5-20 pmol), into the PGE(2)-sensitive site in the peri-OVLT region also elicited responses similar to those induced by PGE(2). Although administration of a GABA(A) receptor agonist, muscimol (10 pmol), microinjected into the same site alone usually had no effect on the rate of whole-body O(2) consumption, heart rate or colon and skin temperatures, all PGE(2)-induced responses were blocked 10 min after the muscimol pretreatment and recovered at 50-90 min. Pretreatment with the vehicle, saline, had no effect on the PGE(2)-induced responses. These results suggest that spontaneous release of GABA and tonic activation of GABA(A) receptors in the peri-OVLT region prevent the elevation in the body core temperature under normal circumstances and that PGE(2)-induced febrile responses are mediated, at least in part, by inhibition of the GABAergic transmission in this area.
- Published
- 2007
36. Continuous carbachol infusion promotes peripheral cell proliferation and mimics vagus hyperactivity in a rat model of hypothalamic obesity
- Author
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Hiroshi Omori, Ryoichi Yoshimura, Shuji Inoue, Yasuhisa Endo, Shingo Somekawa, Rokuro Ito, and Toshimasa Osaka
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Agonist ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carbachol ,medicine.drug_class ,Duodenum ,Hypothalamus ,Biology ,Cholinergic Agonists ,Vagotomy ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Eating ,Internal medicine ,Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen ,medicine ,Animals ,Obesity ,Pancreas ,Cell Proliferation ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Cell growth ,Body Weight ,Vagus Nerve ,General Medicine ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Acetylcholine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Lesions of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) result in obesity and enhanced cellular proliferation in various organs, including the pancreas, gastrointestinal tract, and liver. Previous studies have suggested that vagal hyperactivity, rather than overeating, induces the peripheral cell proliferation in VMH-lesioned rats. The goal of the present study was to investigate the mechanism of peripheral cell proliferation in VMH-lesion-induced obesity by infusing rats with the acetylcholine agonist, carbachol, and then measuring cellular proliferation in the pancreas and duodenum using immunohistochemistry. The ventromedial hypothalamus was bilaterally lesioned in five rats. In other rats, the bilateral vagus nerves were ligated (vagotomized), and saline or carbachol was continuously administered by an osmotic minipump (n = 5 in each group). Three days later, rats were killed, and cell proliferation was assessed in the pancreas and the duodenum using immunohistochemistry for proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Additionally, cellular proliferation in the duodenum was more precisely examined by assessing incorporation of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU). Cellular proliferation was higher in rats that received carbachol infusions and in rats with VMH-lesions when compared with control rats (P0.05, respectively). The pancreatic PCNA-expressing cells were predominantly identified as the B-cells of the islets of Langerhans. These data demonstrate that carbachol infusion can induce pancreatic and duodenal cell proliferation to a degree that was comparable to that in vagal hyperactivity induced by VMH lesions.
- Published
- 2006
37. Combined interleukin-6 and interleukin-1 deficiency causes obesity in young mice
- Author
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Okito Hashimoto, Toshimasa Osaka, Dai Chida, and Yoichiro Iwakura
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Ratón ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Weight Gain ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Mice ,Thinness ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Obesity ,Receptor ,Interleukin 6 ,Mice, Knockout ,biology ,business.industry ,Interleukin-6 ,Body Weight ,Interleukin ,Receptors, Interleukin-1 ,Lipid metabolism ,Endocrinology ,Cytokine ,Phenotype ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Energy Intake ,Weight gain ,Interleukin-1 - Abstract
Proinflammatory cytokines including interleukin (IL)-1 and IL-6 exert pleiotropic effects on the neuro-immuno-endocrine system. Previously, we showed that IL-1 receptor antagonist-deficient (IL-1Ra(-/-)) mice show a lean phenotype due to an abnormal lipid metabolism. On the contrary, it was reported that IL-6(-/-) mice exhibit obesity after 6 months of age. This study sought to assess the roles of IL-1 and IL-6 in body weight homeostasis. We generated mice deficient in IL-6 and IL-1Ra (IL-6(-/-) IL-1Ra(-/-)) and IL-6, IL-1alpha, and IL-1beta (IL-6(-/-) IL-1(-/-)). IL-6(-/-) IL-1Ra(-/-) mice exhibited a lean phenotype, similar to IL-1Ra(-/-) mice. On the other hand, IL-6(-/-) IL-1(-/-) mice became obese as early as 10 weeks of age, while IL-1(-/-) mice and IL-6(-/-) mice were normal at this age. The daily food intake was significantly higher in IL-6(-/-) IL-1(-/-) mice than in IL-6(-/-) IL-1(+/-) mice, while energy expenditure was comparable in these two strains. Acute anorexia induced by peripheral administration of IL-1 was significantly suppressed in IL-6(-/-) IL-1(-/-) mice, but not in IL-1(-/-) mice or IL-6(-/-) mice compared with wild-type mice. These results indicate that IL-1 and IL-6 are both involved in the regulation of body fat in a redundant manner in young mice.
- Published
- 2006
38. Criteria and classification of obesity in Japan and Asia-Oceania
- Author
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Masao, Kanazawa, Nobuo, Yoshiike, Toshimasa, Osaka, Yoshio, Numba, Paul, Zimmet, and Shuji, Inoue
- Subjects
Skinfold Thickness ,Asia ,Japan ,Body Weight ,Oceania ,Humans ,Obesity ,Body Mass Index - Published
- 2005
39. Energy expenditure by intravenous administration of glucagon-like peptide-1 mediated by the lower brainstem and sympathoadrenal system
- Author
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Mari Endo, Shuji Inoue, Midori Yamakawa, and Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Male ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glucagon-Like Peptides ,Vagotomy ,Biochemistry ,Body Temperature ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Glucagon-Like Peptide 1 ,Heart Rate ,Adrenal Glands ,Glucagon-Like Peptide 2 ,Ganglionectomy ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Adrenalectomy ,Propranolol ,Decerebration ,Spinal Cord ,Injections, Intravenous ,Hexamethonium ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Oxygen Consumption ,Prosencephalon ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Sympathoadrenal system ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Injections, Intraventricular ,business.industry ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,Rats ,Autonomic nervous system ,chemistry ,Area Postrema ,business ,Energy Metabolism ,Thermogenesis ,Brain Stem - Abstract
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is released from the gut in response to nutrient ingestion. Intravenous (iv) administration of GLP-1 (50 pmol-20 nmol) elicited dose-dependent increases in the rate of whole-body O2 consumption (VO2), an index of energy expenditure, and heart rate of urethane-anesthetized rats. The body core (colonic) temperature increased up to 0.3 degrees C without accompanying alteration of tail skin temperature. Intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of GLP-1 induced a slower and smaller increase in VO2 than the intravenous administration. The injection of glucagon-like peptide-2 (iv or icv) had no effect on VO2, body temperatures, or heart rate. Decerebration had no effect on the thermogenic responses induced by the iv administration of GLP-1, suggesting that the forebrain is not essential for these responses. However, cervical spinal transection greatly attenuated the responses, suggesting the critical involvement of the lower brainstem. Adrenalectomy or pretreatment with an autonomic ganglion blocker, hexamethonium, or a beta-adrenergic blocker, propranolol, also significantly attenuated the thermogenic response. However, subdiaphragmatic vagotomy or celiac-superior mesenteric ganglionectomy had no effect. Rats made insulin-deficient by pretreatment with streptozotocin also exhibited the normal thermogenic response to GLP-1. These results suggest the involvement of the GLP-1 in postprandial energy expenditure, mediated by the lower brainstem and sympathoadrenal system.
- Published
- 2005
40. Criteria and Classification of Obesity in Japan and Asia-Oceania
- Author
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Paul Zimmet, Masao Kanazawa, Shuji Inoue, Yoshio Numba, Toshimasa Osaka, and Nobuo Yoshiike
- Subjects
business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Overweight ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Classification of obesity ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Overeating ,business ,Body mass index ,Thermogenesis ,Demography - Abstract
In 1997 when WHO initiated the formation of the International Obesity Task Force (IOTF), the Task Force proposed the cut-offs for overweight and obesity as BMI 25 and BMI 30, respectively. If we accept the criteria of BMI ≥ 30 to indicate obesity, it would appear that the prevalence of obesity in Japan of less than 3% has changed little during the last 40 years, and we cannot explain the rapid increase in incidence of obesityassociated chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and hyperlipidemia. Thus, JASSO decided to define BMI ≥ 25 as obesity. This cut-off has been proposed for use in the Asia-Oceania Region, and WHO Western Pacific Region noted this proposal. According to this criterion the prevalence of obesity in Japan would average 20%, with a high of 30% in men over 30 years old, and women over 40 years old. Thus the rates would have increased four times in men and three times in women during these last 40 years. What has caused the increased prevalence of obesity in Japan? Several causes of obesity have been advanced: (i) overeating (ii) errors of eating pattern (iii) inactivity (iv) heredity, and (v) disturbance in thermogenesis. Hyperphagia and inactivity are two major risk factors for obesity. Hyperphagia may be an important factor in individuals. However, the average energy intake in adult people in Japan has not increased; in fact it has declined (2104 kcal/day to 1967 kcal/day) during these 40 years. During this period, the prevalence of obesity has increased three or more times as mentioned above. This indicates that inactivity may be the main cause for the increased incidence of obesity in Japan. Errors of eating pattern (irregular eating, night eating, etc.), including a high proportion of fat to total energy intake (8.7% increased to 26.5%), and a high incidence of β 3-adrenergic polymorphism, might also have contributed to the increased incidence of obesity in Japan.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Cold-induced thermogenesis mediated by GABA in the preoptic area of anesthetized rats
- Author
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Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Agonist ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,Adrenergic beta-Antagonists ,Biology ,Bicuculline ,GABA Antagonists ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Anesthesia ,Neurons, Afferent ,Rats, Wistar ,Neurotransmitter ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,GABAA receptor ,Electromyography ,Thermoregulation ,Preoptic Area ,Propranolol ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,Cold Temperature ,Endocrinology ,Muscimol ,chemistry ,Hypothalamus ,Microinjections ,Skin Temperature ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Bilateral microinjections of GABA (300 mM, 100 nl) or the GABAAreceptor agonist muscimol (100 μM, 100 nl) into the preoptic area (POA) of the hypothalamus increased the rate of whole body O2consumption (V̇o2) and the body core (colonic) temperature of urethane-chloralose-anesthetized, artificially ventilated rats. The most sensitive site was the dorsomedial POA at the level of the anterior commissure. The GABA-induced thermogenesis was accompanied by a tachycardic response and electromyographic (EMG) activity recorded from the femoral or neck muscles. Pretreatment with muscle relaxants (1 mg/kg pancuronium bromide + 4 mg/kg vecuronium bromide iv) prevented GABA-induced EMG activity but had no significant effect on GABA-induced thermogenesis. However, pretreatment with the β-adrenoceptor propranolol (5 mg/kg iv) greatly attenuated the GABA-induced increase in V̇o2and tachycardic responses. Accordingly, the GABA-induced increase in V̇o2reflected mainly nonshivering thermogenesis. On the other hand, cooling of the shaved back of the rat by contact with a plastic bag containing 28°C water also elicited thermogenic, tachycardic, and EMG responses. Bilateral microinjections of the GABAAreceptor antagonist bicuculline (500 μM, 100 nl), but not the vehicle saline, into the POA blocked these skin cooling-induced responses. These results suggest that GABA and GABAAreceptors in the POA mediate cold information arising from the skin for eliciting cold-induced thermogenesis.
- Published
- 2004
42. Thermogenesis elicited by skin cooling in anaesthetized rats: lack of contribution of the cerebral cortex
- Author
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Toshimasa, Osaka
- Subjects
Cerebral Cortex ,Decerebrate State ,Male ,Electromyography ,Adrenergic beta-Antagonists ,Thermogenesis ,Propranolol ,Urethane ,Research Papers ,Body Temperature ,Rats ,Cold Temperature ,Oxygen Consumption ,Prosencephalon ,Chloralose ,Skin Physiological Phenomena ,Animals ,Anesthesia ,Pancuronium ,Rats, Wistar ,Anesthetics, Intravenous ,Neuromuscular Nondepolarizing Agents - Abstract
Non-noxious cooling stimuli were delivered to the shaved back of urethane-chloralose-anaesthetized, artificially ventilated rats using a plastic bag containing water at 24-40 degrees C. Cooling of the skin by 2-6 degrees C increased the rate of whole body oxygen consumption (.V(O(2)) and triggered electromyographic (EMG) activity recorded from the neck or femoral muscles. The cooling-induced (.V(O(2)) responses did not depend on core (colonic) temperature and followed skin temperature in a graded manner. Pretreatment with the beta-blocker propranolol (10 mg kg(-1), i.v.) greatly attenuated the (.V(O(2)) response but did not affect the EMG response. On the other hand, pretreatment with the muscle relaxant pancuronium bromide (2 mg kg(-1), i.v.) affected the (.V(O(2)) response very slightly but completely abolished the EMG activity. Accordingly, the cooling stimulus activated mainly non-shivering thermogenesis. Next, the contribution of the cerebral cortex to the cooling-induced thermogenesis was examined. Power spectral analysis of the electroencephalogram (EEG) showed that the cooling stimulus largely inhibited delta (0.5-3 Hz) waves, enhanced theta (3-8 Hz) waves, and slightly increased frequencies higher than 8 Hz. Pinching the hindpaw elicited changes in EEG similar to those elicited by skin cooling but did not increase the (.V(O(2)). Therefore, there was no relationship between changes in the EEG and the magnitude of thermogenesis. Finally, skin cooling increased the (.V(O(2)) of decorticated rats but did not increase that of decerebrated rats. The results suggest that the subcortical forebrain structure, but not cortical activation, is indispensable for non-shivering thermogenesis elicited by cooling stimulation of the skin.
- Published
- 2003
43. Effects of a high-sucrose diet on body weight, plasma triglycerides, and stress tolerance
- Author
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Masao Kanazawa, Chang Young Xue, Shuichi Kimura, Yoshio Namba, Shuji Inoue, Rokuro Ito, Eiji Suzuki, Haruaki Kageyama, and Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sucrose ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Gene Expression ,Hypothalamus, Middle ,Biology ,Weight Gain ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dietary Sucrose ,Stress, Physiological ,Heat shock protein ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Obesity ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Triglycerides ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Triglyceride ,Catabolism ,Carbohydrate ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Hypothalamus ,medicine.symptom ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Energy Intake ,Weight gain - Abstract
We examine the effects of feeding a high-sucrose diet on body weight gain, plasma triglycerides, and stress tolerance in rats. Feeding a high-sucrose (60%) diet for 2 weeks did not induce a greater body weight gain compared with that of standard diet when caloric intake was similar in ventromedial hypothalamic–lesioned obese and shamoperated lean animals. The high-sucrose diet elevated plasma triglycerides by increasing the triglyceride secretion rate and decreasing the fractional catabolic rate in both groups. In response to stress, feeding a high-sucrose diet for one week induced enhanced gene expressions of heat shock proteins (HSP 70 and 27) and suppressed NOx production in the brain, whereas the standard diet did not. Results suggest that feeding a high-sucrose diet does not induce obesity in lean rats or enhance weight gain in obese rats, if caloric intake is appropriate. The diet does elevate plasma triglycerides in lean and obese rats, but it may have the potential to improve stress tolerance.
- Published
- 2003
44. Orexin-A-sensitive site for energy expenditure localized in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus
- Author
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Jian Wang, Shuji Inoue, and Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lateral hypothalamus ,Microinjections ,Neuropeptide ,Body Temperature ,Orexin-A ,Oxygen Consumption ,Arcuate nucleus ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Injections, Intraventricular ,Orexins ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Neuropeptides ,Arcuate Nucleus of Hypothalamus ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Thermogenesis ,Orexin ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Hypothalamus ,Locus coeruleus ,Neurology (clinical) ,Carrier Proteins ,Energy Metabolism ,Nucleus ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Orexin-A is a unique hypothalamic neuropeptide that stimulates both food intake and energy expenditure, although orexigenic peptides usually have coordinated effects on fat storage by increasing food intake and decreasing energy expenditure. Here we investigated the site of action of orexin-A-induced thermogenesis in urethane-anesthetized rats. Microinjection of 1–10 pmol orexin-A into the arcuate nucleus (Arc) specifically increased whole-body O 2 consumption (VO 2 ), an index of energy expenditure; whereas it had no effect on VO 2 when injected into the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), dorsomedial nucleus (DMH), lateral hypothalamus (LH), ventromedial nucleus (VMH) or medial preoptic nucleus (MPO) of the hypothalamus or into in the paraventricular thalamic nucleus (PVT) or pontine locus coeruleus (LC). VO 2 increased immediately after an orexin-A injection into the Arc, and this increase was accompanied by a simultaneous tachycardiac response and a gradual increase in colonic temperature (T co ), whereas an injection of the saline vehicle into the Arc had no effect. The effective dose of orexin-A into the Arc was 10 times less than that into the cerebral ventricle to induce a similar level of response. In addition, intracerebroventricular administration of orexin-A (100 pmol) elicited a significantly smaller VO 2 response in Arc-lesioned rats than that in sham-operated control rats. These results suggest that the orexin-induced energy expenditure is mediated, at least in part, by the Arc.
- Published
- 2003
45. Impaired ascorbic acid metabolism in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats
- Author
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Toshimasa Osaka, Haruaki Kageyama, Takayo Inayama, Akiyo Matsumoto, Emiko Kasahara, Misato Kashiba, Shuji Inoue, Keizo Umegaki, Jun Oka, Asako Kageyama, Rumi Ichikawa, Masayasu Inoue, Takahiro Ishikawa, and Morimitsu Nishikimi
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blotting, Western ,Organic Anion Transporters, Sodium-Dependent ,Ascorbic Acid ,Kidney ,Biochemistry ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,L-gulonolactone oxidase ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Rats, Wistar ,Sodium-Coupled Vitamin C Transporters ,Cells, Cultured ,DNA Primers ,Oxidase test ,biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Symporters ,Chemistry ,Renal Reabsorption ,Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Streptozotocin ,Ascorbic acid ,Blotting, Northern ,Dehydroascorbic Acid ,Liver Regeneration ,Rats ,Oxidative Stress ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,biology.protein ,Microsomes, Liver ,Oxidoreductases ,L-Gulonolactone Oxidase ,NADP ,medicine.drug ,Sugar Alcohol Dehydrogenases - Abstract
Ascorbic acid (AA) metabolism in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats was determined by examining urinary excretion, renal reabsorption, reductive regeneration, and biosynthesis of AA at 3 and 14 days after STZ administration. AA concentrations in the plasma, liver, and kidney of the diabetic rats were significantly lower than those of controls on d 3, and decreased further as the diabetic state continued. Hepatic AA regeneration significantly decreased in the diabetic rats on d 3 in spite of increased gene expressions of AA regenerating enzymes and was further reduced on d 14. Hepatic activity of L-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase, a terminal enzyme of hepatic AA biosynthesis, also decreased significantly on d 3 and decreased further on d 14. Urinary excretion of AA was significantly increased on d 3, with an increase in urine volume but no change in gene expressions of renal AA transporters (SVCT1 and SVCT2). Urinary excretion of AA was normalized on d 14. The results suggest that impaired hepatic and renal regeneration, as well as increased urinary excretion and impaired hepatic biosynthesis of AA, contributed to the decrease in AA in plasma and tissues of STZ-induced diabetic rats.
- Published
- 2002
46. Distinct role of adiposity and insulin resistance in glucose intolerance: studies in ventromedial hypothalamic-lesioned obese rats
- Author
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Masatomi Tsuji, Tsutomu Hirano, Haruaki Kageyama, Yoshio Namba, Mitsuru Adachi, Toshimasa Osaka, Asako Kageyama, and Shuji Inoue
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Leptin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fructose ,Fatty Acids, Nonesterified ,Impaired glucose tolerance ,Eating ,Endocrinology ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,Blood plasma ,Glucose Intolerance ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Obesity ,Pancreatic hormone ,Triglycerides ,Glucose tolerance test ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Ventromedial Hypothalamic Nucleus ,Area Under Curve ,Dietary Supplements ,Female ,Insulin Resistance ,business ,Blood sampling - Abstract
It remains unclear whether adiposity plays an important role in glucose intolerance independently of insulin resistance. We investigated whether adiposity and insulin resistance had distinct roles in glucose intolerance in rats. We examined glucose tolerance and insulin resistance using ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH)-lesioned rats in the dynamic and the static phases of obesity (2 and 14 weeks after lesioning, respectively). Rats were fed either normal chow or a fructose-enriched diet (60% of total calories). The intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) was performed by bolus injection of glucose solution (1 g/kg) and blood sampling after 0, 5 10, 30, and 60 minutes. Insulin resistance was evaluated from the steady-state plasma glucose (SSPG) value during continuous infusion of glucose, insulin, and somatostatin. SSPG was not increased in VMH-lesioned rats in the dynamic phase of obesity, but increased markedly in the static phase. The area under the glucose curve (glucose AUC) during IVGTT was increased in VMH-lesioned rats in the static phase, but not in the dynamic phase, when compared with their sham-operated counterparts. A fructose-enriched diet for 2 or 14 weeks increased SSPG values to a similar extent in both sham-operated and VMH-lesioned rats without inducing excess adiposity, but glucose intolerance was only developed in the obese rats. The plasma leptin level, an excellent indicator of adiposity, was significantly related to the glucose AUC independently of the insulin level. Insulin resistance or increased adiposity alone is not sufficient to impair glucose tolerance, but increased adiposity plays an important role in the development of glucose intolerance in an insulin-resistant state.
- Published
- 2002
47. Vago–sympathoadrenal reflex in thermogenesis induced by osmotic stimulation of the intestines in the rat
- Author
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Toshimasa Osaka, Akiko Kobayashi, and Shuji Inoue
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Physiology ,Indomethacin ,Hypothalamus ,Biology ,Catecholamines ,Prosencephalon ,Internal medicine ,Adrenal Glands ,Receptors, Adrenergic, beta ,Reflex ,medicine ,Sympathoadrenal system ,Animals ,Neurons, Afferent ,Rats, Wistar ,Denervation ,Decerebrate State ,Saline Solution, Hypertonic ,Portal Vein ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Thermogenesis ,Vagus Nerve ,Femoral Vein ,Research Papers ,Diet ,Rats ,Intestines ,Autonomic nervous system ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Decerebration ,Prostaglandins ,Tonicity ,Adrenal medulla ,Splanchnic ,Energy Metabolism - Abstract
Duodenal infusion of hypertonic solutions elicits osmolality-dependent thermogenesis in urethane-anaesthetized rats. Here we investigated the involvement of the autonomic nervous system, adrenal medulla and brain in the mechanism of this thermogenesis. Bilateral subdiaphragmatic vagotomy greatly attenuated the first hour, but not the later phase, of the thermogenesis induced by 3.6 % NaCl (10 ml kg(-1)). Neither atropine pretreatment (10 mg kg(-1), I.P.) nor capsaicin desensitization had any effect on the osmotically induced thermogenesis, suggesting the involvement of non-nociceptive vagal afferents. Bilateral splanchnic denervation caudal to the suprarenal ganglia also had no effect, suggesting a lack of involvement of spinal afferents and sympathetic efferents to the major upper abdominal organs. Adrenal demedullation greatly attenuated the initial phase, but not the later phase, of thermogenesis. Pretreatment with the beta-blocker propranolol (20 mg kg(-1), I.P.) attenuated the thermogenesis throughout the 3 h observation period. The plasma adrenaline concentration increased significantly 20 min after osmotic stimulation but returned to the basal level after 60 min. The plasma noradrenaline concentration increased 20 min after osmotic stimulation and remained significantly elevated for 120 min. Therefore, adrenaline largely mediated the initial phase of thermogenesis, and noradrenaline was involved in the entire thermogenic response. Moreover, neither decerebration nor pretreatment with the antipyretic indomethacin (10 mg kg(-1), S.C.) had any effect. Accordingly, this thermogenesis did not require the forebrain and was different from that associated with fever. These results show the critical involvement of the vagal afferents, hindbrain and sympathoadrenal system in the thermogenesis induced by osmotic stimulation of the intestines.
- Published
- 2002
48. Thermogenesis induced by intravenous infusion of hypertonic solutions in the rat
- Author
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Shuji Inoue, Shuichi Kimura, Akiko Kobayashi, and Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Ganglionic Blockers ,Adrenergic beta-Antagonists ,Ganglionic blocker ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Hexamethonium ,Body Temperature ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Catecholamines ,Oxygen Consumption ,Adipose Tissue, Brown ,Glucose Solution, Hypertonic ,Internal medicine ,Brown adipose tissue ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Vasoconstrictor Agents ,Mannitol ,Rats, Wistar ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Osmole ,Saline Solution, Hypertonic ,Chemistry ,Osmolar Concentration ,Adrenalectomy ,Thermogenesis ,Original Articles ,Diuretics, Osmotic ,Propranolol ,Rats ,Plasma osmolality ,Arginine Vasopressin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Tonicity ,Bumetanide ,medicine.drug - Abstract
1. Intravenous administration of 20-60 % glucose, 3.2-9.7 % NaCl or 20 % mannitol solutions (1.66 ml kg(-1)) for 5 min increased oxygen consumption in urethane-anaesthetized rats, whereas administration of physiological saline had no effect. Administration of 7.7-18.3 % urea slightly increased the oxygen consumption, but the increase was significantly smaller than that measured after the administration of other hypertonic solutions. The magnitude of the thermogenic effect correlated with the osmolality of the applied solutions. These results suggest that the thermogenesis was caused mainly by changes in osmolality rather than by a specific action of the different solute molecules. 2. Neither pretreatment with the ganglion blocker hexamethonium (20 mg kg(-1), I.P.) or the beta-adrenergic antagonist propranolol (10 mg kg(-1), I.P.), nor bilateral cervical vagotomy or bilateral adrenalectomy had any effect on the osmotically induced thermogenesis. Therefore, the autonomic nervous system and the adrenal gland were not involved in this metabolic response. 3. In response to osmotic stimulation, the temperature of the skeletal muscle increased significantly, whereas that of brown adipose tissue did not change and that of the colon and liver decreased. Accordingly, the site of osmotic thermogenesis is probably in the skeletal muscle, although osmotic stimulation was not accompanied by electromyographic activity and was not blocked by pretreatment with muscle relaxants such as dantrolene sodium or pancuronium bromide, or with the Na(+)-Cl(-) co-transport inhibitor bumetanide. 4. The increases in plasma osmolality observed after the administration of 20 % (1.3 osmol kg(-1)) glucose and 4.1 % (1.3 osmol kg(-1)) NaCl were 4.50 +/- 0.88 and 5.57 +/- 0.71 mosmol kg(-1), respectively. Since the slight increase in osmolality is well within the physiological range of changes that occur after food ingestion, diet-induced thermogenesis may have a component that is mediated by an increase in plasma osmolality, which results from the prandial increase in circulating nutrients.
- Published
- 2001
49. Thermogenesis induced by osmotic stimulation of the intestines in the rat
- Author
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Shuji Inoue, Akiko Kobayashi, and Toshimasa Osaka
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,Physiology ,Stimulation ,Fructose ,Sodium Chloride ,Body Temperature ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Urea ,Amino Acids ,Rats, Wistar ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Respiratory exchange ratio ,Osmoreceptor ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Osmolar Concentration ,Thermogenesis ,Original Articles ,Gastrointestinal Contents ,Rats ,Plasma osmolality ,Intestines ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Basal Metabolism - Abstract
Infusion of 5-20% glucose, 1.8-3.6% NaCl, 20% methylglucose, 20% fructose, or 5-10% solutions of various amino acids (10 ml x kg(-1)) into the duodenum induced dose-dependent thermogenesis in urethane-anaesthetized rats. In contrast, infusion of 0.9% NaCl, distilled water, or safflower oil had no effect on the metabolic rate. Infusion of 7.2% urea induced a small and transient increase in the metabolic rate. These results suggested that the thermogenesis was caused mainly by changes in osmolality rather than by a specific action of the different solute molecules. The respiratory exchange ratio increased after the infusion of glucose, fructose, glycine, or serine, did not change after the infusion of NaCl, methylglucose, safflower oil, or distilled water, and decreased after infusion of arginine. Therefore, there was no relationship between substrate utilization and the occurrence of thermogenesis. Intestinal infusion of 3.6% NaCl elevated the plasma osmolality, with a plateau increase of approximately 20 mosmol x kg(-1). However, intravenous infusion of the same amount of NaCl induced a significantly smaller thermogenic response, although it elevated the plasma osmolality with a time course and magnitude similar to those obtained after the intestinal infusion. Infusion of NaCl into the hepatic portal vein or the peritoneal cavity also produced a significantly small thermogenic response. These results suggested an intestinal or mesenteric location for osmoreceptors. To test for possible stimulation of intestinal osmoreceptors after intake of a normal meal, we measured the osmolality of the intestinal contents. The osmolality of the duodeno-jejunal contents was 600-800 mosmol kg-1, whereas the plasma osmolality was 306 +/- 1 mosmol x kg(-1), which suggests that the intestinal osmoreceptors are stimulated after meals and are involved in diet-induced thermogenesis.
- Published
- 2001
50. Lack of integrative control of heat production and heat loss after capsaicin administration
- Author
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Yoshio Namba, Toshimasa Osaka, Akiko Kobayashi, Shuichi Kimura, Tai Hee Lee, and Shuji Inoue
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Central nervous system ,Hypothalamus ,Sensory system ,Midbrain ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oxygen Consumption ,Heart Rate ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Neurons, Afferent ,Rats, Wistar ,Receptor ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Decerebrate State ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Decerebration ,chemistry ,Capsaicin ,Anesthesia ,Systemic administration ,Skin Temperature ,Body Temperature Regulation ,Brain Stem - Abstract
Body temperature is usually regulated by opposing controls of heat production and heat loss. However, systemic administration of capsaicin activates heat loss and heat production simultaneously. Because capsaicin receptors are located mainly on primary sensory neurons and body temperature is regulated by the central nervous system, we investigated the brain mechanisms involved in these capsaicin-induced thermal responses. For this purpose, we examined the effects of spinalization and decerebration on these responses in artificially ventilated, urethane-anesthetized rats. Cervical spinal transection largely attenuated both responses, showing the critical involvement of the brain. Colonic temperature (Tc) did not change after the capsaicin administration to the spinalized rats. Decerebration between the hypothalamus and midbrain prevented the capsaicin-induced heat loss and enhanced the capsaicin-induced heat production. Consequently, Tc increased without a hypothermic period. The results show that capsaicin activates brainstem-controlled heat production and forebrain-controlled heat loss separately.
- Published
- 2000
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