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The American journal of physiology 1987-Apr

Enhancement of cold-stimulated thermogenesis in the corpulent rat (LA/N cp) by aminophylline.

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T F Lee
L C Wang
J C Russell

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Abstract

Previous studies on obese strains of rats (e.g., Zucker and LA/N cp) have shown that they are deficient in nonshivering thermogenesis and poor in cold tolerance. Our earlier studies have established that aminophylline (AMPY; 85% theophylline-15% ethylenediamine) is effective in significantly improving cold tolerance in the lean Sprague-Dawley rat regardless of age or thermogenic capacity. The present study tested whether AMPY may be also effective in improving cold tolerance in both young (12-18 wk) and older (36-42 wk) lean and corpulent LA/N cp rats. Contrary to previous reports, however, the norepinephrine (NE)-stimulated nonshivering thermogenesis was not only present but also equal in magnitude in the corpulent rats to that of their lean controls. Further, no difference in cold tolerance was observed between the two groups regardless of age. Similarly, AMPY (18.7 mg/kg ip) significantly improved thermogenesis and cold tolerance in both lean and corpulent rats, again without any age-related difference in response. These results indicate that, despite the existence of obesity, no difference in thermogenic capacity to either NE or cold stimulation is evident in the LA/N cp rats. Thus the ontogeny of obesity in this strain may be caused by factors other than deficiency in NE- or cold-stimulated thermogenesis at the end-organ level.

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