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Maintenance on a high-fat diet impairs the anorexic response to glucagon-like-peptide-1 receptor activation.

Physiol Behav · 2011

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on rats, those fed a high-fat diet for 4-6 weeks did not reduce their food intake after receiving a GLP-1 injection, unlike rats on a low-fat diet. However, both groups responded to a stronger GLP-1 drug (exendin-4) at 4 hours, though only the low-fat group maintained reduced intake and weight loss after 24 hours.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPhysiol Behav, 2011
Citations70
Relative citation ratio2.22
NIH percentile77
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Previous data suggests that the adiposity signal leptin reduces food intake in part by enhancing sensitivity to short-term signals that promote meal termination, including glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1). We hypothesized that maintenance on a high-fat (HF) diet, which causes resistance to leptin, would impair GLP-1's ability to reduce food intake. To test this hypothesis, we examined the anorexic responses to intraperitoneal injection of 100 μg/kg GLP-1 and 1 μg/kg exendin-4 (Ex-4), the potent, degradation resistant GLP-1 receptor agonist, in Wistar rats maintained on a low-fat (10%; LF) or HF (60%) diet for 4-6 weeks. Rats maintained on each of these diets were tested twice, once while consuming LF food and once while consuming HF food, to distinguish between effects of acute vs. chronic consumption of HF food. LF-maintained rats tested on LF diet reduced 60-min dark phase intake in response to GLP-1, but HF-maintained rats failed to respond to GLP-1 whether they were tested on HF or LF diet. LF-maintained rats tested on HF diet also showed no response, suggesting that even brief exposure to HF diet can impair sensitivity to GLP-1 receptor activation. Both LF- and HF-maintained rats showed significant anorexic responses to Ex4 at 4h post-treatment, but only LF-maintained rats had significantly reduced intake and body weight 24h after injections. To determine whether the ability of endogenous GLP-1 to promote satiation is impaired by HF maintenance, we examined the response to exendin 3 (9-39) (Ex9), a GLP-1 receptor antagonist. In LF-maintained rats, Ex9 increased intake significantly, but HF-maintained rats reduced food intake in response to Ex9. These data support the suggestion that maintenance on HF diet reduces the anorexic effects of GLP-1 receptor activation, and this phenomenon may contribute to overconsumption of high-fat foods.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21515295 ↗