All Stories

  1. Intravenous administration of oxytocin in rats acutely decreases deprivation-induced chow intake, but it fails to affect consumption of palatable solutions
  2. Central oxytocin receptor stimulation attenuates the orexigenic effects of butorphanol tartrate
  3. Basic research on appetite regulation: Social context of a meal is missing
  4. Oxytocin: A Conditional Anorexigen whose Effects on Appetite Depend on the Physiological, Behavioural and Social Contexts
  5. Oxytocin reduces appetite by acting via the reward system
  6. The Orphan G Protein-Coupled Receptor Gene GPR178 Is Evolutionary Conserved and Altered in Response to Acute Changes in Food Intake
  7. Central Oxytocin and Food Intake: Focus on Macronutrient-Driven Reward
  8. Effect of oxytocin receptor blockade on appetite for sugar is modified by social context
  9. A non-peptide oxytocin receptor agonist, WAY-267,464, alleviates novelty-induced hypophagia in mice: Insights into changes in c-Fos immunoreactivity
  10. Functional relationship between oxytocin and appetite for carbohydrates versus saccharin
  11. Synaptic changes induced by melanocortin signalling
  12. Exposure to a high-fat high-sugar diet causes strong up-regulation of proopiomelanocortin and differentially affects dopamine D1 and D2 receptor gene expression in the brainstem of rats
  13. Oxytocin receptor blockade reduces acquisition but not retrieval of taste aversion and blunts responsiveness of amygdala neurons to an aversive stimulus
  14. Adhesion GPCRs are widely expressed throughout the subsections of the gastrointestinal tract
  15. Feed-forward mechanisms: Addiction-like behavioral and molecular adaptations in overeating
  16. Comprehensive analysis of localization of 78 solute carrier genes throughout the subsections of the rat gastrointestinal tract
  17. Opioids as facilitators of feeding: Can any food be rewarding?
  18. Fto colocalizes with a satiety mediator oxytocin in the brain and upregulates oxytocin gene expression
  19. Functional coupling analysis suggests link between the obesity gene FTO and the BDNF-NTRK2 signaling pathway
  20. Oxytocin as feeding inhibitor: Maintaining homeostasis in consummatory behavior
  21. Molecular, Immunohistochemical, and Pharmacological Evidence of Oxytocin’s Role as Inhibitor of Carbohydrate But Not Fat Intake
  22. Chronic sugar intake dampens feeding-related activity of neurons synthesizing a satiety mediator, oxytocin
  23. Molecular mechanisms underlying anorexia nervosa: Focus on human gene association studies and systems controlling food intake
  24. Opioids
  25. Glutamate, aspartate and nucleotide transporters in the SLC17 family form four main phylogenetic clusters: evolution and tissue expression
  26. Complexity of neural mechanisms underlying overconsumption of sugar in scheduled feeding: Involvement of opioids, orexin, oxytocin and NPY
  27. Hypothalamic FTO is associated with the regulation of energy intake not feeding reward
  28. Analysis of the network of feeding neuroregulators using the Allen Brain Atlas
  29. Ghrelin in the CNS: From hunger to a rewarding and memorable meal?
  30. The Obesity Gene, FTO, Is of Ancient Origin, Up-Regulated during Food Deprivation and Expressed in Neurons of Feeding-Related Nuclei of the Brain
  31. Macronutrients
  32. α-Melanocyte stimulating hormone and ghrelin: Central interaction in feeding control
  33. Central opioids and consumption of sweet tastants: When reward outweighs homeostasis
  34. Central ghrelin induces feeding driven by energy needs not by reward
  35. Intraventricular ghrelin activates oxytocin neurons: implications in feeding behavior
  36. Functional interaction between nociceptin/orphanin FQ and α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone in the regulation of feeding
  37. Effect of opioid receptor ligands injected into the rostral lateral hypothalamus on c-fos and feeding behavior
  38. Central Regulation of Feeding
  39. Intra-amygdalar injection of DAMGO: effects on c-Fos levels in brain sites associated with feeding behavior
  40. Minireview: Characterization of Influence of Central Nociceptin/Orphanin FQ on Consummatory Behavior
  41. Agouti-Related Protein: Appetite or Reward?
  42. Hypothalamic paraventricular injections of ghrelin: effect on feeding and c-Fos immunoreactivity
  43. Effects of intracerebroventricular ethanol on ingestive behavior and induction of c-Fos immunoreactivity in selected brain regions
  44. Neural basis of orexigenic effects of ghrelin acting within lateral hypothalamus
  45. Effect of peptide histidine isoleucine on consummatory behavior in rats
  46. Effect of Agouti-related protein on development of conditioned taste aversion and oxytocin neuronal activation
  47. Evidence of interactions between melanocortin and opioid systems in regulation of feeding
  48. Paraventricular hypothalamic α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone and MTII reduce feeding without causing aversive effects
  49. The effect of [Phe1ψ(CH2-NH)Gly2]-nociceptin(1-13)NH2 on feeding and c-Fos immunoreactivity in selected brain sites
  50. Nocistatin inhibits food intake in rats
  51. Fos expression in feeding-related brain areas following intracerebroventricular administration of orphanin FQ in rats