Affiner votre recherche
Résultats 1-4 de 4
Water, food and poverty in river basins: defining the limits
2014
Fisher, Myles J. | Cook, Simon E.
Water, food and poverty in river basins: defining the limits Texte intégral
2012
Fisher, Myles J. | Cook, Simon E.
Evidence for histamine involvement in the effect of histidine loads on food and water intake in rats
1997
We examined the hypothesis that histidine is a regulator of short-term food and water intake in rats and that this control is through histidine's action as a precursor for histamine. The primary objectives were to measure food and water intake after histidine monohydrochloride monohydrate (His-HCl) given by intragastric (IG) and intraperitoneal (IP) routes of administration and to measure feeding and drinking responses to histidine when given after blockade of the histaminergic pathway by chlorpheniramine (CPA) and alpha-fluoromethylhistidine (FMH). Eight experiments were conducted using a back-to-back design. Rats were given treatment by IP or IG administration, and food and water intake was measured during time periods of 0-1, 1-2, 2-3 and 3-14 h. Histidine consistently reduced food intake with the sensitivity to IP much greater than to the IG route. The effect of histidine given by IP or IG on water intake was similar, generally causing an increase at least in the first hour. Histidine's action was not accounted for by its energy, pH or nitrogen content. Because FMH, which blocks the enzyme converting histidine to histamine, partially reversed the effect of histidine on food and water intake, those results support the hypothesis that histidine regulates food and water intake, at least in part, through its precursor control of histamine.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Vitellogenin as biomarker for estrogenicity in flounder Platichthys flesus in the field and exposed to 17α-ethinylestradiol via food and water in the laboratory Texte intégral
2013
Madsen, Louise Leonharder | Korsgaard, Bodil | Pedersen, Knud Ladegaard | Bjerregaard, Lisette Bachmann | Aagaard, Thomas | Bjerregaard, Poul
The ability of 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) to elevate vitellogenin levels were investigated in male flounder Platichthys flesus and vitellogenin concentrations in flounders from the Danish coastal environment were determined. Male flounders were exposed to 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) via food or water. Average vitellogenin concentrations in the control fish ranged between 25 and 100 ng mL−1. Exposure to 5.1, 8.1 and 16.8 ng EE2 L−1 in water and 500 and 5000 ng EE2 kg−1 body weight (bw) every second day in the food increased the plasma vitellogenin concentration in a concentration and time dependent manner, whereas exposure to 2.7 ng EE2 L−1 in water for 21 d and 5 and 50 ng EE2 kg−1 bw for 12 days in the food did not. EE2 could be detected in liver and testes (but not in muscle) after exposure to 8.1 and 16.8 ng EE2 L−1 in the water and 5000 ng EE2 kg−1 bw in the food; the highest concentration was 6 ng g−1 wet weight in liver. The majority of the male flounders collected from nine coastal Danish sites from 1999 to 2004 had vitellogenin concentrations below 100 ng mL−1, and only at two sites moderate estrogenic inputs were indicated.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]