AI Article Synopsis

  • Diets lacking essential amino acids cause decreased food intake in rats, and the brain region involved in detecting this deficiency is the anterior piriform cortex (APC).
  • Recent findings indicate that the body's response to amino acid deficiency can occur very quickly, within just 15 minutes.
  • In this study, researchers discovered that a threonine- and leucine-deficient diet led to a rapid decrease in those amino acids' concentrations in the APC within 30 minutes, suggesting that this decrease may signal a dietary imbalance to the body.

Article Abstract

Diets deficient in an indispensable amino acid have long been known to suppress food intake in rats. Detection of dietary deficiency takes place in the anterior piriform cortex (APC). Recent studies showed that the response to amino acid deficiency takes as little as 15 min to develop, but few data exist to correlate the concentration of amino acids in the APC with this rapid response. The purpose of this study was to measure the concentration of amino acids in the APC in a behaviorally relevant time frame. Rats were preconditioned by consumption of a basal diet for 7-10 d, and then given a test diet with either a control or deficient amino acid profile. Both the threonine- and leucine-deficient diets reliably depleted threonine and leucine concentration in the APC within 30 min, respectively. The control diets and a diet lacking the dispensable amino acid glycine did not lead to amino acid depletion. In combination with previous studies, the present results show that the decrease in the concentration of indispensable amino acids in the APC may be the initial sensory signal for recognition of dietary amino acid deficiency.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/134.9.2365DOI Listing

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