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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 15, 1999, 19(16):7182-7190
Effect of Intraduodenal Lipid on Parabrachial Gustatory Coding in
Awake Rats
Andras
Hajnal,
Kaoru
Takenouchi, and
Ralph
Norgren
Department of Behavioral Science, College of Medicine, The
Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033
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ABSTRACT |
Intestinal fat differentially suppresses sham feeding of liquid
diets and preferred gustatory stimuli. Although the behavioral effect
is robust, no electrophysiological evidence exists to account for its
neural basis. Therefore, we investigated the effect of intestinal fat
on gustatory coding in the pontine parabrachial nuclei (PBN) by
recording from single neurons in awake rats before, during, and after
intraduodenal infusions of lipid (Intralipid; 10 ml, 5 kcal).
Intraduodenal lipid did not alter the response profiles of PBN taste
neurons. It did, however, produce an overall decrease in response
magnitude ( 16.25%; n = 43), with the largest reduction to sucrose ( 30%; n = 43). The most
pronounced suppression occurred in sucrose-best neurons in response to
sucrose ( 55%; n = 19), and this effect was
largest for the sucrose-specific cells ( 77%; n = 3). After lipid infusions, nonspecific neurons in both the sucrose-best
and NaCl-best categories also responded less to their best stimulus
(sucrose, 46%; n = 16; NaCl, 35%; n = 13). In contrast, no significant changes were
found in NaCl-specific cells in response to NaCl. All effects appeared
with short latency (~5 min) and were reversible within the time frame
of a meal. In controls, duodenal infusions of saline did not cause any
changes in taste responsiveness. These results suggest that intestinal fat has specific effects on taste coding in the PBN that may contribute to the intake suppression of palatable food observed in behavioral studies. The similar, short latency of both the behavioral and neural
effects supports the hypothesis of a preabsorptive site of action.
Key words:
gustatory coding; sucrose; sodium; lipid; duodenum; postprandial satiety; single-unit recording; pontine parabrachial
nucleus; rats
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INTRODUCTION |
Food intake is controlled by both
sensory and metabolic mechanisms. Within the time frame of a meal,
however, an ability to select essential nutrients cannot be based on
the metabolic consequences of food currently being consumed.
Nevertheless, it could be attributable to the individual
associative history of a previous food with the orosensory
characteristics of that food. Thus, in the short-term regulation
of feeding (meal size, postprandial satiety), the sensory components of
food play a dominant role ("direct control of meal size") (Smith,
1996 ). The sensory control of meal size is the result of
integration of orosensory feedback from gustatory, olfactory, and
somatosensory receptors, and postingestive feedback from the stomach
and small intestine. Sham-feeding preparations are used to isolate the
orosensory from the postingestive effects of nutrients.
Using such preparations, numerous studies demonstrate that fat
infusions into the duodenum decrease food intake during real or sham
feeding in different species (Liebling et al., 1975 ; Novin et al.,
1979 ; Reidelberger et al., 1983 ; Gregory and Rayner, 1987 ; Welch et
al., 1988 ; Greenberg et al., 1990 ; Foster et al., 1996 , 1998 ). The
inhibitory effect of intraduodenal fats on sham feeding is a function
of concentration (Reidelberger et al., 1983 ; Greenberg et al., 1990 ;
Foster et al., 1996 ). Furthermore, recent studies in our laboratory
show that intestinal fat (Intralipid) differentially suppresses sham
drinking of gustatory stimuli (Foster et al., 1996 , 1998 ). Intake
suppression caused by intestinal fat was the most pronounced for the
most preferred diets (polycose and sucrose) (Foster et al., 1996 ). The
short latency of the effects implies a preabsorptive site of action.
Although the results of the behavioral experiments provide strong
evidence that intestinal lipid has differential effects on intake
suppression of nutrients, the underlying neuronal mechanisms are
unknown. In the present experiment, we investigated the effect of
intraduodenal infusions of lipid on gustatory coding in the pontine
parabrachial nuclei (PBN), the second central gustatory relay, by
recording from single neurons in rats. In rodents, the PBN apparently
contain an obligate synapse in the central gustatory system, and they
have connections with the neural areas thought to be important in
processing gustatory afferent activity (Norgren, 1974 , 1976 , 1990 ,
1995 ). Studies from this laboratory provided further data about the
parabrachial gustatory coding in awake rats (Nishijo and Norgren, 1990 ,
1991 , 1997 ). To make direct comparisons between the neurophysiological
and behavioral data, the present experiment also was performed in
awake, behaving rats.
Results from a subset of these data have appeared as an abstract
(Hajnal et al., 1998 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects and first surgery. All experimental
protocols were approved by the Local Review Committee and followed
National Institutes of Health guidelines. Twelve male Sprague Dawley
rats (340-440 gm; Charles River, Wilmington, MA) were housed
individually on a 12 hr light/dark schedule (lights on at 7:00
A.M.). The rats were kept on a standard laboratory diet [Rodent Diet
(W) 8604; Harlan Teklab, Madison, Wisconsin], which consists of 4.4%
fat (~10% of total calories).
Except for the duodenal surgery and infusions, the procedures used in
the present study were identical to those of our previously published
experiments (Nishijo and Norgren, 1990 , 1997 ). Before surgery, the rats
were acclimated by handling and accustomed to being placed into a
small, plastic restraining cage (Clear Acrylic; Fisher Scientific,
Houston, TX) for increasing periods (up to 2 hr) while on a water
deprivation regimen (see Materials and Methods, Training).
Surgical procedures were performed under aseptic conditions in two
stages. The rats were food deprived overnight, given atropine the next
morning (0.1 mg/rat, i.p.), and then anesthetized (pentobarbital
sodium, Nembutal; 50 mg/kg, i.p.). In the first stage, a dental acrylic
headpiece was mounted onto the skull, and catheters were implanted into
the oral cavity. After 8-10 d recovery and a subsequent ~1 month
training period, the rats were reanesthetized and implanted with a
duodenal catheter, and gustatory responses were localized in the PBN.
Briefly, in the first surgery, after being anesthetized, the rat was
mounted in a stereotaxic apparatus using blunt ear bars, with the skull
leveled between and . The cranium was exposed, and seven sterile
stainless steel screws (1-72 × inch; Small Parts
Inc., Miami Lakes, FL) were threaded into holes in the skull to serve
as anchors for cranioplastic acrylic. Stainless steel wire was soldered
onto two screws to serve as a ground. The acrylic was built up on the
skull and molded around the conical ends of two sets of stainless steel
rods that were attached rigidly to the ear bars. During subsequent
chronic recording sessions, these rods were reattached to the ear bars
more medially and fitted back into the acrylic impressions, thus
painlessly fixing the rat's head in the stereotaxic plane. Intraoral
cannulas (PE-100; Clay Adams, Parsippany, NJ) were implanted
bilaterally, just anterior to the first maxillary molar, brought out
subcutaneously, and embedded in the cranioplastic acrylic (Phillips and
Norgren, 1970 ).
Training. After recovery (8-10 d) from surgery, the rats
were reacclimated to the plastic restraining cage, placed on a 22 hr
water deprivation regimen, and trained to take 0.3 M sucrose and water from a spout while in the
restrainer (1-2 hr daily, for ~1 week). After the rats learned to
take their fluids while restrained, they were put in the stereotaxic
instrument with their head fixed for gradually increasing periods. When
they would remain calm in the stereotaxic frame for 3 hr, sucrose was
replaced gradually with distilled water, first via the spout, and then
via the intraoral cannulas. During the next stage of training (7-10
d), the rats received occasional infusions of the tastes, preceded and
followed with water, to familiarize them with the solutions. At this
stage, intraduodenal lipid infusions also were introduced gradually (3, 5, and 10 ml on the first, second, and third days, respectively). Some
of the oral stimulus and water trials occurred during and after the
lipid infusions, again to make certain that when recording began the
experience would not be novel. These procedures produced no evidence of
learned taste aversion (see Discussion).
The method of intraoral taste stimulation via oral cannulas was
described previously in detail (Grill and Norgren 1978a ,b ). Briefly,
water and tastants were delivered from a handheld, 1.0 ml hypodermic
syringe through a length of PE-10 tubing (Clay Adams) constructed so
that its tip protruded 1-2 mm beyond the oral end of the cannula. This
arrangement ensured that fluid was delivered directly into the oral
cavity and did not reflux up the lumen of the cannula.
Throughout training and recording, if the rats failed to ingest at
least 15 ml of water while in the restrainer, they received the
remainder in their home cages. The rats were weighed weekly to ensure
that they were not losing weight.
Localization of taste area and implantation of duodenal
catheter. After this training (~1 month), the rats were
reanaesthetized and mounted in the stereotaxic instrument. To reduce
the consequences of repeated anesthesia and surgical traumas, this
procedure was performed at the same time as the duodenal catheter
implantation. Just caudal to the interparietal suture, a 3 × 5 mm
oval area of the acrylic and underlying bone was drilled away, the
exposed dura was excised, and the PBN gustatory area was located
electrophysiologically using an electrode tilted 20° off
perpendicular (tip anterior) to avoid damage to the transverse sinus. A
stainless steel wire (178 µm in diameter), insulated except at the
cross section of the tip, was implanted near the midline in the dorsal
medulla to serve as an indifferent electrode. After these procedures
and, subsequently, between chronic recording sessions, the exposed brain was treated with an antibiotic-steroid ointment (Neo-Predef; Pharmacia & Upjohn Co., Clayton, NC). The hole was covered with Teflon
sheet and sealed with two-component epoxy glue, and antibiotic was
administered for 3 d (Gentamicin 5 mg, i.m.).
To implant the duodenal catheter, we used the method of Walls et al.
(1995) , as modified by Dr. G. J. Schwartz (The Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, personal communication). After a 5 cm midline incision had been made in the abdomen exposing the liver and small intestines, the duodenum was
perforated 1 cm aboral from the pyloric sphincter with a 22 gauge
needle. SILASTIC tubing [0.012 inner diameter (i.d.) × 0.025 outer diameter (o.d.), 20 cm] was inserted through this
perforation up to a 1 cm2 piece of Marlex
mesh that had been attached to the tubing with silicone cement 2 cm
from the end. This mesh was sewn onto the duodenum, immobilizing the 2 cm segment of tubing within. The free end of the tubing was drawn
through a small puncture on the left abdominal wall and then threaded
subdermally to the neck where a 2.5 cm interscapular midline incision
had been made previously. A piece of 2 × 3 cm Marlex mesh sealed
together with a 4 cm length SILASTIC tubing (0.025 o.d. × 0.047 i.d.)
served as a subcutaneous base for the outer end of the duodenal
catheter. Rats were treated with both topical (Erythromycin 0.5%;
Bausch & Lomb, Rochester, NY) and systemic antibiotics (Gentamicin, 5 mg i.m.; Fujisawa USA, Deerfield, IL) for 3 d. The catheter was
flushed with 1 cc of sterile saline before and after training and
recording sessions.
Electrophysiological recording and sapid stimuli. After an
animal learned to remain quiet for up to 2 hr while it had an
intraduodenal lipid infusion and ingested 5-10 ml of fluid via an
intraoral catheter, recording sessions began. The Teflon sheet and
ointment were removed, and a glass-insulated tungsten microelectrode
(Z = 1.5-3.5 M at 1 kHz) was advanced through the
cerebellum into the PBN. Extracellular neural activity was monitored on
an oscilloscope and recorded on magnetic tape. After isolating a single
unit, a trial began with 50 µl of distilled water applied via the
ipsilateral intraoral cannula and then a similar amount of sapid
stimulus, followed by at least one water rinse of the same volume, all
at room temperature (23-25°C). The minimum interval between water and stimulus application was 15 sec and between one taste stimulus and
the next was 45 sec. The lipid infusion began after this initial sequence. After the onset of the gut infusion, the taste stimuli were
tested every 5 min, for as long as the cell remained isolated, in the
following order (in M): 0.1 NaCl, 0.1 sucrose, 0.01 citric acid, and 10 4
quinine-HCl. Electrode penetrations into gustatory responsive areas
were restricted to two per day, and at least 2 d separated each
recording session.
Duodenal infusions. During daily training sessions, rats
received a 10 ml infusion of a fat emulsion (Intralipid 20% diluted to
5% soybean oil, 0.56% glycerin, 0.3% phospholipids, and 0.5 kcal/ml;
Pharmacia & Upjohn Co.) or the same amount of sterile physiological
saline at a rate of 1 ml/min, both at room temperature (23-25°C).
The infusions began 15-20 min after the rats were placed into the
stereotaxic instrument and were followed by an additional 60-90 min of
restraint, during which more fluid was presented. Subsequently, in the
home cage, they were allowed to drink the remainder of their 15 ml of
water. Approximately 15 gm of powdered lab chow was presented at 6:00
P.M. This food was almost always ingested overnight. If not, what
little remained was removed at least 3 hr before the training or
recording sessions started. This schedule assured a constant body
weight while they were receiving 10 cc Intralipid infusions. This
amount of lipid infused in combination with the food restriction did
not result in a substantial increase in the portion of the fat in the
daily diet (e.g., <20% calories from fat). Therefore, this schedule
cannot be considered to be a chronic high-fat diet (Warwick and
Schiffman, 1992 ; Warwick, 1996 ).
Data analysis. The single-unit activity was converted
on-line to standardized pulses with a two-level voltage discriminator. These were accumulated in peristimulus histograms with 500 msec bins
using a personal computer. The signal-to-noise ratio of the single unit
and the discriminator settings were monitored continuously using a
storage oscilloscope. All data were archived on magnetic tape. In some
cases, records were analyzed off-line, using an analog-to-digital
converter and spike analyzing system (CED 1041, Spike 2 program,
Cambridge Electronic Design Ltd., Cambridge, UK). Responses were
calculated for 5 sec from the onset of the peristimulus water or the
taste infusion. For water, the mean spontaneous rate was subtracted
from the raw water response, and for taste, the mean water response was
substracted from the raw taste response. These corrected data were used
in all statistical analyses. A response was considered significant if
it deviated ±2.5 SD from the mean of the peristimulus water trials.
Statistical analysis consisted of parametric and nonparametric
ANOVA [single-factor ANOVA, MicroSoft Excel '97 (MicroSoft,
Seattle, WA); two-way ANOVA, Kruskall-Wallis and Friedman
ANOVA, Statistica 5.1 (StatSoft Inc., Tulsa, OK)] followed by
independent or paired t-tests where appropriate for
comparisons of neural responses and either
2 or Fisher's exact tests for
comparisons between neural categories (Statistica 5.1). The Pearson's
product-moment correlation coefficients for all possible pairs of
responses were calculated and used to conduct cluster analysis (average
linkage methods, Pearson's r, Statistica 5.1). Breadth of
responsiveness was calculated for entropy based on both the absolute
values and the excitatory components of the activity generated by each
of the four tastants (Smith and Travers, 1979 ). The entropy
(H) measure of each neuron was given by the
formula
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where pi is the proportional
response to each of the four tastes. The
pi for each cell is derived by converting
the response profile for that cell to a proportional profile that
maintains the relative differences among the four responses.
Histology. After the recording sessions, the animals were
reanaesthetized, and small electrolytic lesions (10 µA for 5 sec) were made at the rostral, caudal, lateral, and medial margins of the
gustatory responsive area in the pons. Subsequently, 10 ml of saline
colored with food dye was infused into the duodenum, and the abdomen
was exposed to check for possible reflux of fluid into the stomach.
Finally, the rats were given a further lethal dose of Nembutal (100 mg/kg, i.p.) and perfused intracardially with 0.9% saline and 10%
formalin. The brain was removed and cut coronally in 50 µm sections,
and alternate sections were stained with the cresyl Lecht violet
and Weil methods.
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RESULTS |
Histology
A total of 458 penetrations was made into the pons in 12 rats; in
eight of these 12, both the left and right sides were explored. Single-unit or multiunit electrophysiological responses to sapid stimuli occurred during 275 of these penetrations, and testing of
single neurons with the four standard taste stimuli was completed during 174. Based on the stereotaxic coordinates of the penetrations and the marking lesions, the taste-responsive neurons were located in
the caudomedial quadrant of the PBN extending from near the dorsal
surface of the pons through the brachium conjunctivum and into the
compact layer of cells between the brachium conjunctivum and the
mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus. This approximate location is
consistent with our previous samples from chronic studies (Nishijo and
Norgren, 1990 , 1991 , 1997 ) and with acute experiments in which localization was an objective (Norgren and Pfaffmann, 1975 ). Since the
penetrations were made over the course of 1 month or more, and assuming
an accuracy of at best 100 µm for such measurement in chronic
studies, more precise localization of individual recording sites is impractical.
Basic characteristics of taste neurons before and after
lipid infusions
A total of 174 taste-responsive single PBN neurons was isolated
and tested with the four standard taste stimuli. Of these, 63 were
isolated before, during (10 min), and for a minimum of 25 min after the
intraduodenal infusions. Four of these responded significantly only to
water, or with an excitatory response to water and inhibitory responses
to one or two sapid chemicals. Of the remaining 59 cells, 43 were
tested in lipid-infusion sessions and 16 in saline-infusion control
sessions. The control neurons were recorded from both rats that were
previously trained with daily infusions of lipid and rats trained with
saline (n = 9; n = 7, respectively).
Before the infusions, no significant differences in response properties
occurred between these two subpopulations or between the lipid and
saline samples for any parameters. For the entire sample of 59 cells,
the average length of recording was 65 min (range of 40-110 min),
including the test periods before and during infusions. The mean
spontaneous firing rate of 59 taste cells was 6.1 ± 0.8 (SEM)
spikes/sec (range of 0.3-18 spikes/sec).
Based on the largest response to the standard stimuli, the neurons were
classified as follows: 27 NaCl-best (Nb, 45.8%), 24 sucrose-best (Sb,
40.6%), 5 citric acid-best (Cb, 8.5%), and 3 QHCl-best (Qb, 5.1%).
Of these 59 neurons, 14 (23.7%) were "specific"; that is, they
responded significantly only to one of the taste stimuli
[NaCl-specific (Ns), 9; 33.3%; sucrose-specific (Ss), 5; 20.8%].
For further classification of the cells, see Table 1.
Intraduodenal infusions of either lipid or saline had no effect on the
distribution of cells across the best-stimulus categories. Within
best-stimulus categories, the distribution of specific responses after
lipid infusion was identical to that found before the treatment.
Response profile changes in response to intraduodenal lipid
The individual response profiles of all 59 neurons before and
after lipid infusions are displayed in Figure
1. The spontaneous activity and response
profile of each neuron recorded before (Fig. 1A) and
after (Fig. 1B) lipid infusions are arranged in
descending order of response magnitude, beginning with the NaCl-best
cells on the left, followed by the sucrose-best, then the
citric acid-best, and then the QHCl-best neurons. The number of cells
in each best-stimulus category appears in Table 1. Filled
bars represent significant responses. In all figures and
throughout the text, if is it not specified otherwise, the "after
lipid" data were generated in the period immediately after the offset
of lipid infusions (i.e., 10 min after the onset of infusions).

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Figure 1.
Spontaneous firing rates and response profiles of
43 PBN taste neurons to the four standard taste stimuli and to water
before (A; n = 43) and after
(B; n = 43) intraduodenal infusions
of lipid (Intralipid 10 ml, 0.5 kcal/ml). All cells were tested with
all stimuli. Neurons are grouped into best-stimulus categories and
arranged within those categories in decreasing order of response
magnitude to the best stimulus. There are 18 NaCl-best, 19 sucrose-best, 4 citric acid-best, and 2 QHCl-best neurons. Taste
responses were adjusted for average water responses; the response to
water was adjusted for spontaneous rates. Spontaneous rates are shown
at the bottom with unit numbers. Filled
bars, Significant responses (for criterion, see Materials and
Methods). Excitatory responses are up; inhibitory
responses are down. None of the inhibitory taste
responses reached the criterion for significance.
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The mean effect of lipid on the spontaneous rate and water and taste
responses across the best stimulus categories are depicted in Figure
2. After lipid infusions, no significant
differences were found in spontaneous rate (ANOVA;
F(1,84) = 0.009; p = 0.922; 2 = 0.4195; df = 1;
p = 0.512) or in water responses (ANOVA;
F(1,84) = 1.27; p = 0.262; 2 = 2.279; df = 1;
p = 0.131) compared with the basal condition. In
contrast, lipid did have an effect on overall taste responses of the
PBN (Fig. 2). The magnitude of total taste responsiveness decreased
16.25% (two-way ANCOVA; F(3,252) = 5.47; p < 0.01). Across the four sapid stimuli, the
responses to sucrose decreased 30% (ANOVA;
F(1,84) = 7.065; p < 0. 01; n = 43), to NaCl 19% (ANOVA; F(1,84) = 4.282; p < 0.05; n = 43), and 8% for both citric acid and QHCl
(F(1,84) = 0.439; p > 0.5; n = 43; F(1,84) = 0.594; p > 0.4; n = 43, respectively).

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Figure 2.
Comparison of average responses and spontaneous
rates before and after intraduodenal infusion of lipid across
best-stimulus categories. Nb, Sb,
Cb, Qb, NaCl-best, sucrose-best, citric
acid-best, and QHCl-best, respectively. Open bars,
Before lipid; filled bars, after lipid.
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01.
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The magnitude of the effect differed across best-stimulus categories.
The most pronounced suppression ( 55%) occurred in sucrose-best neurons responding to sucrose (ANOVA;
F(1,36) = 8.817; p < 0.01; n = 19), followed by sodium-best neurons
responding to NaCl ( 32%; ANOVA;
F(1,34) = 6.277; p < 0.05; n = 18). Although few in number, neither the
citric acid-best (n = 4) nor the QHCl-best
(n = 2) neurons (Fig. 2, Cb, Qb)
exhibited any significant change in response to any stimulus after
intestinal lipid infusions.
Further analysis of the subgroups revealed important differences
between the sucrose-best and NaCl-best neurons (Fig.
3). After lipid infusions, the responses
of sucrose-specific cells to sucrose (Fig. 3Aa) dropped to
one-quarter of the basal values ( 77%;
F(1,4) = 76.31; p < 0.001; n = 3), whereas the more broadly tuned
sucrose-best sample (Fig. 3Aa, Sx) decreased by
one-half ( 46%; F(1,30) = 5.78;
p < 0.05; n = 16). The difference in
the degree of response suppression in the two subcategories of
sucrose-best units was statistically significant (Sx vs Ss,
2 =7.26; p < 0.01).

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Figure 3.
Effect of intraduodenal lipid (A,
B) and saline (C, D) on
the mean response magnitudes within best-stimulus categories of 59 PBN
taste neurons. Top (A, C), Responses to
sucrose; bottom (B, D), responses to NaCl.
Sb, All sucrose-best cells; Sx,
sucrose-best cells that also responded significantly to at least one
other stimulus; Ss, sucrose cells that failed to respond
to any other stimuli; SN, sucrose-best cells that
responded second best to NaCl; Nb, all NaCl-best;
Nx, NaCl-best cells that also responded to at least one
other stimulus; Ns, NaCl cells that failed to respond to
any other stimuli; NS, NaCl-best cells that responded
second best to sucrose. Numbers in parentheses, Number
of neurons in each category. Note that Sb = Sx + Ss and Nb = Nx + Ns. Open bars, Before
infusions; filled bars, after infusions. Percent values
in Aa and Bb, Average changes of taste
responsiveness to lipid infusions; *p < 0.05;
**p < 0.01.
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In contrast to the sucrose-specific cells, lipid failed to change the
responses of NaCl-specific units to an NaCl stimulus (Ns,
F(1,8) = 0.412; p = 0.538; n = 5) (Fig. 3Bb), but other
NaCl-best neurons did drop 35% (Nx,
F(1,24) = 6.588; p < 0.05; n = 13). When NaCl-best cells were tested with
sucrose (Fig. 3Ab) and sucrose-best units with NaCl (Fig.
3Ba), duodenal lipid infusions had no influence on the
responses. This even held when sucrose was the second most effective
stimulus for an NaCl-best cell (Fig. 3Ab,
NS) or NaCl was second for sucrose-best cells (Fig.
3Ba, SN). When saline was
substituted for lipid, the duodenal infusions had no effect on any
category of PBN gustatory neurons (n = 16) (Fig.
3C,D). In other words, lipid infusions reduced
the sensory responses of parabrachial gustatory neurons only when
sucrose or NaCl was the stimulus and then only when the cells responded
best to sucrose or NaCl, respectively.
Breadth of responsiveness
In the present study, 23.7% (14 of 59) of the taste neurons were
specific to one of four sapid stimuli. Under basal conditions, the mean
entropy measures for the absolute values and excitatory components of
the gustatory responses were 0.80 and 0.77, respectively. For the
specific cells, these mean entropy values were 0.52 and 0.44. The lipid
infusion resulted in significant changes in the breadth of
responsiveness only for the sucrose-specific cells. Their entropy
values increased from 0.32 to 0.64 (F(1,4) = 20.72; p < 0.01; n = 3) because, after the lipid infusions, the
response to sucrose decreased substantially, but the responses to the
other sapid stimuli did not. Nevertheless, the increased entropy value did not reflect a change in the best-stimulus category of
sucrose-responsive cells, although, based on our criteria, the
gustatory responses became nonsignificant after the lipid infusions.
Time course of the duodenal infusion effect
With the exception of the NaCl-specific neurons, all cells in the
NaCl-best and sucrose-best categories showed a significant decrease in
response magnitude to their best stimulus. The reduction in taste
responsiveness appeared with a short latency (~5 min), and reached
maximum in the 10 min after the end of the lipid infusions. The
mean changes in response magnitude differed across best-stimulus categories in response to their best-taste (Nb to NaCl vs Sb to sucrose, Friedman ANOVA; 2 =7.36;
p < 0.01) (Fig.
4A) (Ns to NaCl vs Ss
to sucrose, 2 = 8.42; p < 0.01) (Fig. 4B). Post hoc t
tests revealed significant differences between NaCl-best and
sucrose-best cells in responses recorded 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 min
after the onset of lipid infusion (p < 0.01, at
10 min; p < 0.05, at 15-30 min) (Fig.
4A) and between NaCl-specific and sucrose-specific
cells in samples taken 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 min after lipid
(p < 0.05; n = 5;
p < 0.01; n = 8; p < 0.05; n = 8; 5, 10-15, and 20-25, respectively) (Fig.
4B).

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Figure 4.
Time course of the intraduodenal lipid effect on
the mean response magnitudes of NaCl-best and sucrose-best cells
(A) and sucrose-specific and NaCl-specific cells
(B) in response to their best stimulus. Mean ± SEM responses are expressed as a percentage of the mean responses
before lipid infusions (e.g., "baseline" at 100%).
Abscissa, Time in minutes after the onset of the lipid
infusion. Stimuli were applied every 5 min. After 50 min, data from
every other trial are displayed. The number of cells tested at each
time point varied, because not all cells remained isolated for the same
period. The time course of the lipid effect was similar, even when the
data came only from cells that were tested over the entire period.
n values for the first test after the offset of the
lipid infusion (10-15 min) were as follows: sucrose-best (open
circles), 19; NaCl-best (filled circles),
18; sucrose-specific (filled squares), 3;
NaCl-specific (open squares), 5.
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Although all effects were reversible within the time frame of a normal
meal, the duration of the suppression of salt responses in NaCl-best
cells was shorter than for sucrose responses in sucrose-best neurons.
The inhibition of NaCl-best cells to an NaCl stimulus recovered by 20 min after the onset of lipid infusion, whereas the sucrose responses of
sucrose-best units required 35 min to return to their basal levels
(Fig. 4A). The differences in the duration of the
inhibitory effects was even greater for the neurons that responded
specifically to either sucrose or NaCl (Fig. 4B). In
fact, the NaCl-specific cells failed to exhibit a significant decrease
in response magnitude to sapid NaCl during duodenal lipid infusions. In
contrast, the sucrose-specific units displayed a substantial decrease
in response magnitude to sapid sucrose that did not recover for 30 min.
Hierarchial cluster analysis
The results of a hierarchical cluster analysis derived from
Pearson's product-moment correlations using the average linkage method appear in Figure 5. The unit
numbers and their response characteristics are listed on the
left. In the dendrograms, the level at which two neurons, or
two clusters of neurons, join indicates their shared correlation
coefficient. Thus, a linkage distance (1 Pearson's
r) of 0.0 means an identical response profile, i.e.,
Pearson's correlation coefficient of 1.00.

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Figure 5.
Dendrograms of 43 PBN taste neurons recorded
before (A) and after (B)
lipid infusions resulting from a hierarchical cluster analysis using
Pearson's product-moment correlation coefficients and the average
linkage method. Left, The number of each neuron and
response category. Index x means additional, second or
third order, taste responses. Abscissa, Linkage distance
(1 Pearson's r) between neurons or clusters.
For further explanation, see Results.
|
|
Before the duodenal infusion, with one exception (unit 5, CSx), the
four clusters with the greatest linkage distances, and consequently,
the lowest shared correlation coefficients (r < 0.1)
are coextensive with the four best-stimulus categories (Fig. 5A). With somewhat less fidelity, the second and third order
clusters also reflect the best-stimulus categories, i.e., four of five sucrose-best cells that responded second best to citric acid make up a
subcluster with one acid-best sucrose neuron (units 5, 24, 28, 29, and 8). After the lipid infusions (Fig. 5B), the first order clusters remained primarily defined by best-stimulus category, and the shared correlation coefficients of the first five largest clusters changed little compared with those before the lipid (Qb, 0.98 vs 0.99; Cb, 0.73 vs 0.78; Sb, 0.61 without the SQ units 26 and 36 vs
0.68 for Sb1 or 0.63 for Sb2; Nb, 0.6 vs 0.58, before and after lipid, respectively).
The major change in the dendrograms is that, after lipid infusions, the
cluster containing the sucrose-best neurons split into two equal
subclusters (Sb1 and Sb2 with 12 neurons in each). Further analysis of
the Sb2 cluster revealed that these cells have lower response rates to
their best-stimuli compared with sucrose- or NaCl- best cells in the
Sb1 or Nb clusters, respectively (mean responses, 3.9 vs 8.05 Hz for Sb
cells in Sb2 and Sb1, respectively; 6.94 vs 9.61 Hz for Nb cells in Sb2
and Nb, respectively). In fact, after lipid infusions, the suppression
of the sucrose responses in the Sb2 sucrose-best cells was
significantly greater than that of the nonspecific sucrose-best cells
in the Sb1 cluster (62.5 vs 44.2%; 2
=4.5; p < 0.05). The import of the cluster analysis is
to demonstrate that, aside from sucrose-best neurons, the response
relationships between the neurons did not alter substantially as a
function of the intraduodenal infusions.
Summary of the results
Although intraduodenal infusions of lipid did not change the basic
characteristics of PBN taste neurons, overall responsiveness decreased.
The magnitude of the reductions in response differed across and within
the best-stimulus categories. Specifically, the most pronounced
suppression occurred when sucrose-best neurons were tested with sapid
sucrose, and this effect was largest for the sucrose-specific cells.
Nonspecific NaCl-best neurons also responded less to their best
stimulus (i.e., to NaCl) after lipid infusions, but the NaCl-specific
cells did not. Furthermore, intraduodenal lipid infusions failed to
decrease the responses of nonspecific sucrose-best cells to NaCl or of
nonspecific NaCl-best neurons to sucrose. No significant changes were
observed in response to citric acid or QHCl for any cells in the
sample, nor did citric acid-best or QHCl-best neurons alter their
responses to sucrose or NaCl. Although all effects appeared with short
latency and were reversible within the time frame of a meal,
significant differences did occur in the rate of recovery of the
gustatory responses. The suppressive effect of lipid on responses to
sucrose was longer than for responses to NaCl. In controls, no changes
were observed in taste responses as a function of duodenal saline infusion.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The major observation of this study is that intestinal lipid
infusions have an effect on central gustatory coding that is both
neuron- and stimulus-specific. The results are consistent with previous
behavioral findings that intraduodenal lipid infusions suppress sham
feeding (see introductory remarks). Both the behavioral and
electrophysiological consequences appear to begin within a few minutes
(5-10 min), and both are reversible within a time frame of a meal
(30-40 min). This latency is significantly shorter than that for
absorption after duodenal infusions (Clark et al., 1973 ; Holt and
Bennett-Clark, 1975 ; Greenberg et al., 1995 ) and, thus, indicates a
preabsorptive site of action (for review, see Greenberg and Smith,
1996 ). Furthermore, the changes in PBN taste responsiveness involved
the sucrose- and NaCl-best neurons differentially and were not seen in
citric acid- and QHCl-best cells. The magnitude of the changes, as well
as the differential contribution of specific taste cells, suggests that
intestinal fat has rapid feedback effects predominantly on tastes that
signal nutritional value.
This nutritional specificity concept is consonant with data from
orbitofrontal cortex neurons that respond to specific flavors, such as
black current juice and glucose, and lose their response only to the
stimulus on which the monkey has been satiated (Rolls et al., 1989 ).
Similar, although less specific, effects also have been noted in
multiunit gustatory activity recorded from the nucleus of the solitary
tract (NST) in anesthetized rats (Giza et al., 1992 ). Unlike the
current effects, which appear to begin preabsorptively, the NST
experiments used intravenous nutrient infusions, and, in monkeys, the
effects occurred with a time course that did not exclude postabsorptive
mechanisms. Despite the differences among the experiments, the major
effect was similar; nutrients in the body inhibited central taste
responses differentially as a function of the nutrient relevance of the
sapid stimulus.
In the present experiment, however, the mechanism of this differential
effect may arise more from the facilitatory effects of the deprivation
state than from differential inhibition imposed by the fat infusions.
The rats in our paradigm were somewhat food-deprived but not
salt-deprived. This may have contributed to the observed difference in
the magnitude and duration of the response decrement to sapid sucrose
and NaCl. The largest effect, the 77% reduction in the response
exhibited by sucrose-specific neurons to oral sucrose, resulted more
from the greater magnitude of their preinfusion responses, because the
absolute level of the postinfusion responses did not differ between the
sucrose-specific and the other sucrose-best neurons. In contrast,
before the infusion, the NaCl-specific cells actually displayed
somewhat smaller responses to oral NaCl compared with the other
NaCl-best units. Because of that lower preinfusion responsiveness,
intraduodenal lipid failed to reduce the responses of these specific
cells, although the postinfusion NaCl-responsiveness of entire sample
of NaCl-best neurons did decrease. In other words, the effect of lipid
in the gut may be relatively nonspecific, in that responses to both
sucrose and NaCl decrease to between five and eight spikes/sec.
Nevertheless, by reducing all gustatory responses to the same low
level, this effect could contribute to the inhibition of feeding
behavior by eliminating those responses that had been selectively
facilitated by the need state.
The first interpretation assigns the specificity of the inhibitory
response to the gut infusion with or without influence from need state.
The second interpretation assigns specificity to the need state, which
facilitates neural responses to some sapid stimuli and not others. The
inhibition from the gut infusion can be more general. The two
interpretations need not be mutually exclusive, nor can the present
data distinguish between them.
The only other need state that has been tested during gustatory
stimulation is sodium appetite. During dietary sodium deficiency, inhibition of responses to sapid stimuli has been reported at three
levels of the gustatory system: the chorda tympani, the NST, and the
PBN (Contreras and Frank, 1979 ; Jacobs et al., 1988 ; Nakamura and
Norgren, 1995 ; Shimura et al., 1997a ). Only one of these reports
involved awake behaving animals, and the recording was in the NST
(Nakamura and Norgren, 1995 ). In all cases, the inhibition resulted
from the induction of the need state, not from its relief. One other
experiment in the NST reported enhanced responses during sodium
deficiency (Tamura and Norgren, 1997 ). In this case, the appetite was
induced rapidly using a diuretic, furosemide. This treatment aroused
the animals sufficiently that they required light anesthesia for the
recording to proceed. In any event, none of the experiments with sodium
appetite involved satiation of the need state, and only one involved
the PBN and that was in anesthetized preparations (Shimura et al.,
1997a ). An experiment parallel to the present one that imposes a sodium rather than a caloric deficit and that uses duodenal NaCl infusions rather than fat is required for a direct comparison of the effects of
the two motivational systems on gustatory afferent coding.
Discomfort or illness also can depress food intake and, in the process,
produce conditioned taste aversion (CTA) (Garcia et al., 1974 ), which
may alter taste coding (Chang and Scott, 1984 ; Shimura et al., 1997b ).
In fact, certain lipids, e.g., oleic acid, can damage the intestinal
mucosa and produce a strong CTA to sucrose (Ramirez et al., 1997 ). In
contrast, Intralipid failed to cause signs of discomfort or a CTA
(Friedman et al., 1996 ; Greenberg and Smith, 1996 ), and, when infused
into the duodenum, its satiating effect was indistinguishable from that
typically seen after normal ingestion (Greenberg et al., 1990 ).
Although our infusions were more rapid than what is used typically, if
the lipid was inducing a CTA, our rats would have ingested less sucrose
during training or rejected it during the recording session, which they
did not. Furthermore, a CTA to sucrose also would have altered the
behavior and neural activity in controls, half of which were trained
with intraduodenal lipid, but whose neural responses were recorded during saline infusion. All this suggests that the observed effects were specific to lipid and not the result of a CTA nor of the mechanical or osmotic consequences of the volume injected.
One concomitant of satiety is a change in the hedonic valence of the
consummatory stimulus. Such a change is reasonably easy to assess in
humans (Rolls et al., 1982 ; Johnson and Vickers, 1993 ; Simon et al.,
1993 ; Halmi, 1995 ) and has been inferred from the behavior of animals
(Antin et al., 1977 ; Foster et al., 1996 , 1998 ). The neural basis for
such changes animates research into motivational effects on sensory
coding in general, and on gustatory afferent activity in particular,
because some tastes appear to have inherent hedonic characteristics.
The neurons that responded most specifically to sucrose were the most
affected by the intraduodenal lipid infusion. Such specificity could
lend credence to the idea that the most narrowly tuned gustatory cells
are more sensitive to the need state of the animal and thus provide a
disproportionate share of the hedonic information about sapid stimuli.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 6, 1999; revised June 1, 1999; accepted June 7, 1999.
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants DC
00240 and MH 43787. R.N. is a recipient of National Institute of Mental
Health Research Scientist Award MH 00653. A.H. is supported partially
by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA) at the Neurophysiology
Research Group of MTA at the Department of Physiology, University
Medical School, Pecs, Hungary. We thank Drs. B. Li and H. Nishijo for methodological advice, Dr. P. S. Grigson for comments
on an earlier draft of this manuscript, and K. Smith for histology.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Andras Hajnal, Department of
Behavioral Science, College of Medicine, The Pennsylvania State
University, Hershey, PA 17033.
Dr. Takenouchi's present address: Department of Neuropsychiatry,
Kagoshima University, Kagoshima 890-8520, Japan.
 |
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