Abstract
Rats consume most of their daily food intake at night; serum leptin levels and adipose tissue leptin mRNA content are elevated at night in non-lactating rats fed ad libitum. Lactation induces massive hyperphagia with most food still consumed at night, but the nocturnal increase in leptin secretion was not observed in lactating rats. Thus the link between nocturnal food intake and increased serum leptin is broken during lactation and the hypoleptinaemia may be an important factor promoting the hyperphagia of lactation.
Publication types
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Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
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Adipocytes / cytology
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Adipocytes / metabolism
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Analysis of Variance
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Animals
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Blood Glucose / metabolism
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Body Weight
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Circadian Rhythm*
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Darkness
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Fatty Acids / biosynthesis
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Fatty Acids, Nonesterified / blood
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Female
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Insulin / blood
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Lactation / physiology*
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Leptin
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Light
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Proteins / genetics
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Proteins / metabolism*
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RNA, Messenger / genetics
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RNA, Messenger / metabolism
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Rats
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Rats, Wistar
Substances
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Blood Glucose
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Fatty Acids
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Fatty Acids, Nonesterified
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Insulin
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Leptin
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Proteins
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RNA, Messenger