Original Article

Obesity (2007) 15, 1969–1979; doi: 10.1038/oby.2007.235

Overeating by Young Obesity-prone and Lean Rats Caused by Tastes Associated With Low Energy Foods

W. David Pierce*, C. Donald Heth, Joanna C. Owczarczyk, James C. Russell§ and Spencer D. Proctor§

  1. *Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
  2. Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
  3. Department of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
  4. §Alberta Institute of Human Nutrition, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.

Correspondence: W. David Pierce University of Alberta, Department of Sociology, Tory 5-21, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2H4 Canada. E-mail: dpierce@ualberta.ca

Received 6 December 2006; Revised  0000; Accepted 16 January 2007.

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Abstract

Objective: Childhood obesity is a prominent health problem that may involve early learning about tastes and the energy content of foods. We tested the hypothesis that food tastes predictive of low energy content cause overeating in young animals.

Research Methods and Procedures: Juvenile and adolescent (4- and 8-week-old) male JCR:LA-cp lean (+/cp or +/+) and obesity-prone (cp/cp) rats were given sweet (saccharin) and salty (sodium chloride) gelatin cubes made with starch (high caloric) or no starch (low caloric) for 16 days of taste conditioning. After 10 hours of food deprivation, rats received pre-meals with flavors that had been paired or unpaired with high caloric content during taste conditioning, followed immediately by measurement of chow intake at regular meals.

Results: Our findings show that both lean (+/cp) and obesity-prone (cp/cp) juvenile rats ate more regular chow after a pre-meal with a flavor associated with low caloric value than after a similar pre-meal with a flavor predictive of high caloric content. This effect occurred with juvenile rats but not with adolescents.

Discussion: Data from our study indicate that the subversion of the relationship between taste and caloric content disrupts the normal physiological and behavioral energy balance of juvenile rats, resulting in overeating that is independent of genetic disposition for obesity.

Keywords:

childhood obesity, animal models, genetic susceptibility, eating behaviors, behavioral science

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