The development of feeding and drinking behavior will be studied in the suckling rat with techniques that 1) allow for the measurement of both its milk and water intake, and 2) permit the injection of chemical agents into its brain in a benign procedure that does not interfere with its subsequent behavior. We will continue to study the ontogenetic calendar with which the developing brain becomes responsive to agents that arouse (renin, angiotensin, hypersomotic solutes) or suppress drinking (prostaglandin Es), and that arouse feeding (norepinephrine, 2-deoxy-D-glucose). Having found two treatments that induce hyperphagia in the newborn (1) complete subdiaphragmatic denervation, + (2) removal of a preweanling rat from the litter for free-feeding through an oral catheter, we will investigate the mechanism of both and their implications for control of suckling and adult feeding. We will study the effects of early nutritional history on adult drinking behavior. Weanling rats will be raised on dilute liquid diet or will be desalivated. Both regimes will prevent body water losses, but one (the former) will provide excess oral lubrication, and the other will dry the mouth. The temporal pattern of the animals' spontaneous meals and drafts and their responsiveness to deficit signals will be studied when normal oral conditions are restored and when the animals are challenged with deficits in adulthood.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD017992-02
Application #
3314975
Study Section
Biopsychology Study Section (BPO)
Project Start
1984-09-01
Project End
1987-08-31
Budget Start
1985-09-01
Budget End
1986-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
1985
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Leshem, M; Flynn, F W; Epstein, A N (1990) Brain glucoprivation and ketoprivation do not promote ingestion in the suckling rat pup. Am J Physiol 258:R365-75
Leshem, M; Epstein, A N (1989) Ontogeny of renin-induced salt appetite in the rat pup. Dev Psychobiol 22:437-45
Perfumi, M; Massi, M; Costa, G et al. (1989) The development in infant rats of kassinin's potent and selective control of cell-dehydration thirst. Peptides 10:125-30
Leshem, M (1989) Cranial puncture, a simple procedure requiring no preparatory surgery: validation by observation of drinking and salt appetite evoked by intracerebroventricular renin. J Neurosci Methods 29:151-5
Lora-Vilchis, M C; Chambert, G; Rodriguez-Zendejas, A M et al. (1988) Ontogeny of alpha- and beta-adrenergic anorexia in rats. Am J Physiol 255:R908-13
Leshem, M; Epstein, A N (1988) Thirst-induced anorexias and the ontogeny of thirst in the rat. Dev Psychobiol 21:651-62
Leshem, M; Boggan, B; Epstein, A N (1988) The ontogeny of drinking evoked by activation of brain angiotensin in the rat pup. Dev Psychobiol 21:63-75
De Caro, G; Perfumi, M; Epstein, A N (1987) The ontogeny of the antidipsogenic effect of eledoisin and physalaemin in the rat. Appetite 9:179-89