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Palatable food avoidance and acceptance learning with different stressors in female rats.

Neuroscience · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on rats, two types of stress—interoceptive (using LiCl and exendin-4) and restraint stress (RS)—had opposite effects on eating behavior. Rats given butter icing followed by interoceptive stress completely avoided the food, while those experiencing restraint stress ate even more of it over time compared to control rats. The results suggest that different stressors can lead to either avoidance or increased acceptance of palatable foods.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNeuroscience, 2013
Citations8
Relative citation ratio0.29
NIH percentile18
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Stress activates the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis leading to the release of glucocorticoids (GC). Increased activity of the HPA axis and GC exposure has been suggested to facilitate the development of obesity and metabolic syndrome. Nonetheless, different stressors can produce distinct effects on food intake and may support different directions of food learning e.g. avoidance or acceptance. This study examined whether interoceptive (LiCl and exendin-4) and restraint stress (RS) support similar or distinct food learning. Female rats were exposed to different stressors after their consumption of a palatable food (butter icing). After four palatable food-stress pairings, distinct intakes of the butter icing were observed in rats treated with different stressors. Rats that received butter icing followed by intraperitoneal injections of LiCl (42.3mg/kg) and exendin-4 (10μg/kg) completely avoided the palatable food with subsequent presentations. In contrast, rats experiencing RS paired with the palatable food increased their consumption of butter icing across trials and did so to a greater degree than rats receiving saline injections. These data indicate that interoceptive and psychosocial stressors support conditioned food avoidance and acceptance, respectively. Examination of c-Fos immunoreactivity revealed distinct neural activation by interoceptive and psychosocial stressors that could provide the neural basis underlying opposite direction of food acceptance learning.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23380501 ↗