Chronic inhibition of GABA transaminase results in activation of thermogenesis and brown fat in the rat

R. Horton, N. J. Rothwell, M. J. Stock

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

1. 1. Oral administration of the GABA transaminase inhibitor ethanolamine-O-sulphate (EOS, 5 mg/ml in drinking water) to rats for 14 days suppressed food intake by 24%, but reduced weight gain by over 35%. 2. 2. Thus, feed efficiency (g gain/MJ eaten) was decreased by over 15% in EOS-treated rats, suggesting that there had been an increase in metabolic rate. 3. 3. The thermogenic response (rise in oxygen consumption, VO2) to injection of noradrenaline was enhanced by 50% and the thermogenic activity of brown adipose tissue (BAT, assessed from mitochondrial GDP-binding) was increased by 38% in EOS-treated rats. 4. 4. Injection of baclofen (a GABAB agonist, 0.5 mg/kg s.c.) stimulated VO2 in both groups, with a significantly greater response in EOS treated rats, and this was enhanced by bicuculline (GABAA antagonist, 0.5 g/kg s.c.) in control rats and attenuated by muscimol (GABAA agonist, 0.5 mg/kg s.c.) in control and EOS-treated rats. 5. 5. The data indicate that increasing brain GABA concentrations with EOS results in lower levels of metabolic efficiency and increases in thermogenesis. © 1988.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)403-405
Number of pages2
JournalGeneral Pharmacology
Volume19
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - 1988

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