The temporal organization of ingestive behaviour and its interaction with regulation of energy balance

JH Strubbe*, G van Dijk

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

78 Citations (Scopus)
618 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Body weight of man and animals is under homeostatic control mediated by the adjustment of food intake It is discussed in this review that besides signals reporting energy deficits, optimized programs of body clocks take part in feeding behaviour as well Circadian light- and food-entrainable clocks determine anticipatory adaptive behavioural and physiological mechanisms, promoting or inhibiting food intake In fact these clocks form the constraints within which the homeostatic regulation of feeding behaviour is operating Therefore, a strong interaction between circadian and homeostatic regulation must occur. In this homeostatic control, a wide variety of regulatory negative feedback mechanisms, or satiety signals, play a dominant role. In this respect several gut hormones and body temperature function as 'short-term' satiety factors and determine meal sizes and intermeal intervals Leptin, secreted by fat cells in proportion to the size of adipose tissue mass, is probably an important determinant of the 'long-term' regulation of feeding behaviour by setting the motivational background level for feeding behaviour. Thus, initiation or termination of meals at any particular point in time, depends on the resultant of all satiety signals and on constraints imposed by circadian light- and food-entrainable oscillators. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberPII S0149-7634(02)00016-7
Pages (from-to)485-498
Number of pages14
JournalNeuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
Volume26
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun-2002

Keywords

  • circadian rhythms
  • regulation of food intake
  • body weight
  • leptin
  • GLP-1
  • cholecystokinin
  • hypothalamus
  • food-entrainable oscillator
  • suprachiasmatic nucleus
  • FOOD-INTAKE
  • BODY-WEIGHT
  • SUPRACHIASMATIC NUCLEUS
  • CIRCADIAN-RHYTHMS
  • SKELETON PHOTOPERIOD
  • FEEDING PATTERNS
  • BLOOD-GLUCOSE
  • DIETARY-FAT
  • OBESE GENE
  • OB/OB MICE

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