Differential effects of lipopolysaccharide and cholecystokinin on sucrose intake and palatability.

The differential effects of CCK and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on sucrose intake and palatability were examined. Rats were injected with LPS (200 μg/kg ip) or NaCl (0.9%, vehicle) and 2 h later received a second injection of either CCK (8 μg/kg ip) or NaCl. In experiment 1, sucrose (0.3 M) intake was monitored for 1 h on three different test days 72 h apart, while in experiment 2, palatability was assessed by means of the taste reactivity test (TRT) on two separate days (72 h apart). In the TRT, orofacial and somatic responses to brief (30 s) intraoral infusions of sucrose were recorded and analyzed for response frequency. Singly, LPS and CCK reduced sucrose intake, with a more pronounced effect from combined LPS and CCK. LPS by itself did not alter sucrose palatability, as evidenced by continuous high levels of ingestive responding. In contrast, CCK-treated rats displayed a pattern of responding indicative of satiety, as did the combined LPS-CCK-treated rats. These results suggest that LPS does not induce hypophagia by altering palatability.

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