Upload
others
View
2
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
PORTLAND
17th Annual Meeting of the SOCIETY FOR THE STUDY OF INGESTIVE BEHAVIOR
MEETING PROGRAM
JULY 28 - AUGUST 1, 2009
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
CMY
K
SSIB 2009 PROGRAM COVER.pdf 7/20/09 1:13:36 PM
PROGRAM SUMMARY
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 8:30 - 14:00 SSIB Board Meeting
15:00 - 18:00 Meeting Registration
18:00 - 20:00 Opening Reception
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 7:00 - 18:00 Meeting Registration
7:30 - 8:15 Continental Breakfast
8:15 - 8:30 Opening Greetings
8:30 - 10:30 Neural Correlates of Reward in Animal and Human Models
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:00 Mars Lecture
12:00 - 13:30 Ajinomoto Symposium Luncheon
13:30 - 15:30 New Investigator Travel Award (NITA) Symposium
15:30 - 16:00 Coffee Break
16:00 - 17:00 NIH Workshop for Postdocs and Graduate Students - Judy Podskalny Training Program NIDDK
17:00 - 19:00 Poster Session
Thursday, July 30, 2009 7:30 - 18:00 Meeting Registration
8:15 - 9:00 Continental Breakfast
9:00 - 10:30 Oral Abstract Session - Reward
9:00 - 10:30 Oral Abstract Session – Visceral/Vagal
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:00 Mars Lecture
12:00 - 13:30 Lunch on your own
12:00 - 13:30 SSIB Professor-Student Luncheon
13:30 - 15:30 Are Combination Therapies for Obesity Superior to Mono-Therapies?
15:30 - 16:00 Coffee Break
16:00 - 17:45 Oral Abstract Session – Associative/Learning
16:00 - 18:00 Salt Intake: Control and Consequences
18:00 - 20:00 Poster Session
Friday, July 31, 2009 7:30 - 18:00 Meeting Registration
7:45 - 8:30 Continental Breakfast
8:30 - 10:30 Maternal and early life precursors to obesity: Animal and human studies
8:30 - 10:30 Oral Abstract Session – NTS/Hindbrain
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:00 Mars Lecture
12:00 - 14:00 Lunch on your own
12:00 - 16:00 Press Release Interviews
12:15 - 13:45 Industry-Academia Luncheon Exchange
14:00 - 16:00 Gastrointestinal Surgeries: Understanding Mechanisms of Weight Loss
16:00 - 16:30 Coffee Break
16:30 - 18:00 Oral Abstract Session - CNS/Adiposity
16:30 - 18:00 Oral Abstract Session – Assorted Topic Session
18:00 - 20:00 Poster Session Saturday, August 1, 2009 7:30 - 15:00 Meeting Registration
7:45 - 8:30 Continental Breakfast
8:30 - 10:30 Anorexia: Diversity in Mechanism and Outcome
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:00 Mars Lecture
12:00 - 14:00 Lunch on your own
14:00 - 15:00 Professional Development Session: All the Answers to the Questions You Wanted to Know About Your Future Employment, But Were Afraid to Ask Your mentor. Post-docs and students only.
15:00 - 15:15 Awards Session Introduction
15:15 - 15:45 Alan N. Epstein Award
15:45 - 16:15 Distinguished Career Award
16:15 - 17:15 Business Meeting
19:30 - 23:00 Banquet
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
1 1
TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE
Program Summary …………………………………....………….. Inside Front Cover Message from the President…………………...………...………... 2 - 3
Officers, Board Members, and Committees……..……...………... 4 Instructions to Presenters...……...………...……………….……... 5 Awards............................................................................................. 6 Program Schedule …...………….………………….…………….. 7 - 16 Poster Session I Index ……...………………………..…………… 17 - 20 Poster Session II Index ……………...………………..………….. 20 - 22 Poster Session III Index……...……………..……………..……… 23 - 26 Sponsors and Exhibitors ……………………………...………….. 27 - 28 Attendee Directory …………..………………………..………….. 29
See You Next Year!
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
2 2
MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT
Dear Colleagues, Welcome to the 17th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior. I’m excited about this year’s program and you should be as well. In addition, we are at a wonderful venue in the historic and award winning Benson Hotel, currently listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It’s an American classic and Portland is rated as one of the best cities to visit, dine and live in! The Program Committee, chaired by Harvey Grill, has gone above and beyond the call of duty lining up top-notch Mars Lecturers, symposia and oral sessions speakers that demonstrate the diverse nature of the science of ingestive behavior in SSIB, the premier society on this topic in the world. Specifically, regarding the Mars lecturers, we begin with our own SSIB member, my former colleague for more than a decade, and personal friend Dr. John DeCastro, who founded the Mars (formerly Masterfoods) Lectures with Dr. Stephen French of Mars (Masterfoods) some years ago now, speaking on the Control of food intake in free-living humans. He will be followed by another friend, Dr. Paul Sawchenko, speaking about his pioneering work on brain stress systems, and then Dr. Brian Wansink speaking about his exciting and often surprising findings concerning ‘mindless eating’ by humans, and last but not least, another friend (can’t have too many of them), Dr. Richard Simerly, who will speak on his exciting developmental work on survival brain circuits involved with feeding in rodents. As always, there is the important and always impressive New Investigator Symposium. New this year is a idea I borrowed from another society where graduate students and postdoctorals can ask “All the answers to the questions you wanted to know about your future employment, but were afraid to ask your mentor’…this will occur on our last afternoon and will be accomplished without the presence of any of the mentors (i.e., faculty are not permitted) to facilitate free communication among the students/postdocs with a panel representing young faculty, experienced faculty (I like that term as I get older), industry, women’s issues, government employment, non-profits and more. Round-table discussants will include: Janet Guss (Non-Profit Science Investment firm—Ecotrust), Mads Tang-Christensen (Small Industry- Gubra), Tim Bartness (Professor), Derek Daniels (new Assistant Professor), Diana Williams (new Assistant Professor, women’s issues as scientists), Michael Selmanoff (NIH), Marion Hetherington (Professor), Bert Bentham (Large Industry-AstroZeneca), Dorothy Lagg (Large Industry, woman in industry, Mars). We are also very fortunate to have once again Dr. Judy Podskalny, Director, Career Development, Research Fellowship, and Digestive Disease Centers Programs, who will give a workshop for postdoctorals and graduates students on grants and new programs/procedures at the NIDDK/NIH relevant to the mission of SSIB. Finally, in terms of the formal program, there will be the Award’s Session, where we will give this year’s winners of the Alan N. Epstein Award (Dr. Derek Daniels) and Distinguished Career Award (Dr. Paul McHugh), as well as the Gerard P. Smith Award (TBA) at the Banquet. We are continuing the ‘lunch with the professors’ where small groups of students have the opportunity to meet with senior investigators to discuss research and career options. Once again, we owe thanks to Sue Grigson for organizing these important interactions. As, with last year, the Ajinomoto Company will hold a satellite symposium on Wednesday, July 29th from 12:00-1:30PM. Pre-registration for this event is required and lunch will be provided.
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
3 3
This is the first meeting completely overseen by our management company SPLtrak, working with our wonderful Program Committee and others. Special thanks goes to Jamie Price, our Executive Manager from SPLtrak, who works with SSIB on a daily basis to not only organize our meetings, but all other aspects of our society. I’d be lost without her and so would the rest of us and the Society. In addition, I have relied heavily on the considerable advice and unending knowledge of or Past President, Dr. Alan Spector. A special thanks also goes to the Awards Committee, chaired by our President-Elect, Marion Hetherington. I also thank our Treasurer, Nori Geary for his careful fiscal oversight of the meeting and all things financial, as well our accountants from SPLtrak. Finally, and most importantly, I sincerely thank our corporate benefactors, sponsors, and donors for their generous contributions to our society allowing us to maintain the very highest quality of scientific programming at our annual meeting and to provide travel support for new investigators, especially in this year of world-wide troubled economic times. When you see the representatives from these various industrial benefactors, please thank them personally because without them, none of this would be possible. Enjoy yourselves, learn a lot, offer a lot, and remember, we are the ‘dancing society’ and this year we have a live band, ‘The Exiles’ to continue this tradition. Timothy J. Bartness SSIB President, 2008-2009
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
4 4
SSIB 2008-2009 OFFICERS
President ………………………….……….. Timothy J. Bartness, Ph.D., Georgia State University President-Elect …...…………….….. Marion Hetherington Ph.D., Glasgow Caledonian University Past-President ….…………….….…………….... Alan C. Spector, Ph.D., Florida State University Secretary ……..………..………………………….. Lisa A. Eckel, Ph.D., Florida State University Treasurer ………..…..……..….. Nori Geary, Ph.D., Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH)
BOARD MEMBERS Allan Geliebter, Ph.D., Columbia University Patricia Sue Grigson, Ph.D., Penn State College of Medicine Suzanne Higgs, Ph.D., University of Birmingham Harry R. Kissileff , Ph.D., St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital (Honorary Board Member) Ellen Ladenheim, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine Michelle Lee, Ph.D., University of Wales Swansea Thomas A. Lutz, Ph.D., Vetsuisse Faculty University of Zurich Christa Patterson, New Jersey Medical School (Student Representative) Linda Rinaman, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh Martin R Yeomans, Ph.D., University of Sussex PROGRAM COMMITTEE Harvey Grill, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA (2009; CHAIR) Michael Lowe, Ph.D., Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA (2010; Sub-chair) Alan Watts, Ph.D., University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA (Sub-chair) Suzanne Higgs, Ph.D., University of Birmingham, UK (2011) Martin Yeomans, Ph.D., University of Sussex, Falmer, UK (2010) Stephen Benoit, Ph.D., University of Cincinnati, USA (2009) Michael Cowley, Ph.D., Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, Beaverton, OR, USA (2009) Christine Feinle-Bisset, Ph.D., University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia (2010) Matt Hayes, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA (2011) Leann Birch, Ph.D., Penn State University, University Park, PA, USA (2011) LOCAL ORGANIZER Kevin Grove, Ph.D., Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, Beaverton, OR, USA LONG RANGE PLANNING COMMITTEE Wolfgang Langhans, DVM, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland (2010; CHAIR) Kevin Grove, Ph.D., Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, Beaverton, OR, USA (2010) Ruth Harris, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA (2011) Barry Levin, M.D., New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ, USA (2009) Maurizio Massi, University of Camerino, Camerino, Italy (2011) Linda Rinaman, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA (2009)
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
5 5
INSTRUCTIONS TO ORAL PRESENTERS
OVERVIEW
Speakers may bring their presentations to the Speaker Ready Area on any of the following mediums:
CD-ROM DVD-ROM USB Storage Device A Laptop (additional time will be required for
data transfer) NAMING SCHEME
We ask that you name your presentation as follows: Example: If your name is Robert Smith and you are speaking on Wednesday, July 29th @ 8:00 am you would name your presentation: rsmith_Wed_0800.ppt. AT THE PODIUM The computers will be Microsoft Windows-based computers with Microsoft PowerPoint (Office 2007 version) installed. PowerPoint (.ppt or .pptx) is the required program for all users. [Please note that Internet access will not be available during your presentation or in the Speaker Ready Room.] A NOTE TO APPLE MACINTOSH USERS
Mac users should not use “drag-and-drop” to insert pictures and video files. Most problems, such as the infamous “red x” are the result of this. Using the “INSERT” command from the menu will virtually eliminate these issues. The PowerPoint file must have the .ppt or .pptx suffix to be accepted. As noted above, QuickTime movies (.MOV) must be converted to a PC compatible format before submission. A/V staff will be available to assist with conversion in the speaker ready room. SPEAKER READY AREA
The Speaker Ready Area is located at the registration desk and will follow registration desk hours.
INSTRUCTIONS TO POSTER
PRESENTERS The poster sessions are important to the success of the conference, contributing to both the breadth and depth of the conference program. Poster presentations make it possible for a large number of important developments in the field of Ingestive Behavior to be presented. The poster program provides authors with the opportunity to interact directly with colleagues to discuss research results at a level of detail that cannot be approached in formal questions following an oral presentation. Conference participants may view your poster paper by attending the specific session that you are in attendance or by touring the poster areas during other times. POSTER AREA Cambridge/Oxford Room, Brighton Room, Windsor Room, Regency Room, Crystal Ballroom, Mayfair Ballroom PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING 1. Poster display boards will be available for mounting of posters beginning at 8:00 AM on the day of your presentation. 2. All posters must be mounted by noon on the day of your poster presentation. 3. Posters must remain on display until the end of your poster session. 4. Posters must be removed by 8:00 AM the morning following your poster presentation. 5. Each poster board is 4 feet high and 8 feet wide. Mounting materials will be provided onsite. 6. No photography is permitted in the poster sessions.
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
6
AWARD RECEPIENTS
Distinguished Career Award
Paul McHugh, M.D. Johns Hopkins Medical School, USA
Alan N. Epstein Research Award
Derek Daniels, Ph.D. University at Buffalo, SUNY, USA
New Investigator Travel Awards (listed alphabetically)
Denovan Begg, Deakin University, Australia Nicholas Bello, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, USA Damien Glass, City University of New York – Brooklyn College, USA
Alexander Johnson, Johns Hopkins University, USA Michel Joosten, University of Wageningen, the Netherlands
Clare Mathes, Florida State University, USA Catarina Potes, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Sarah Royal, Ryerson University, Canada Andrew Shin, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, USA
Steven Zukerman, City University of New York – Brooklyn College, USA
PLEASE JOIN US IN CONGRATULATING THIS YEAR’S AWARDEES
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
7 7
PROGRAM SCHEDULE TUESDAY, JULY 28, 2009
18:00 - 20:00 Mayfair Ballroom OPENING RECEPTION
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 2009
7:30 - 8:15 Kent Room CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
8:15 - 8:30 Mayfair Room OPENING GREETINGS
Tim Bartness, President
8:30 - 10:30 Mayfair Room NEURAL CORRELATES OF REWARD IN ANIMAL AND HUMAN MODELS
Chair: Eric Stice, Oregon Research Institute, Eugene, OR, USA
08:30 1
ROLE OF OREXIN NEURONS IN CONDITIONED REWARD-SEEKING AND ADDICTION: IMPLICATIONS FOR OBESITY GARY ASTON-JONES. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA
09:00
2 ENDOGENOUS OPIOIDS CONTRIBUTE TO TASTE REWARD ENCODING IN THE AMYGDALA SHARIF TAHA. University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
09:30
3 KAPPA OPIOID RECEPTOR ACTIVATION SUPPRESSES REWARD-RELATED PHASIC DOPAMINE SIGNALING AND MOTIVATION MITCHELL ROITMAN. University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
10:00
4 FOOD REINFORCEMENT AND OBESITY LEONARD EPSTEIN. University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo, NY, USA
10:30 - 11:00 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
11:00 - 12:00 Mayfair Room MARS LECTURE
Mars Incorporated is proud to sponsor the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior Mars Lecture Series 2009 and wish every success for this event. Chair: Christine Feinle-Bissett, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
5 THE CONTROL OF INTAKE IN FREE-LIVING HUMANS: FACTS, THEORIES, AND SIMULATIONS JOHN DE CASTRO. Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX, USA
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
8
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 2009
12:00 - 13:30 Crystal Ballroom AJINOMOTO LUNCHEON SYMPOSIUM
13:30 - 15:30 Mayfair Room
NEW INVESTIGATOR TRAVEL AWARD (NITA) SYMPOSIUM Chair: Tim Bartness, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA Awardees presenting in another session: Damien Glass, PhD student, & Dr Clare Mathes, Postdoctoral Fellow
13:30 6
DIETARY Ω-3 POLYUNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS (PUFA) ELIMINATE THIRST DEFICITS ASSOCIATED WITH AGING DP BEGG1,2, AJ SINCLAIR1, RS WEISINGER2. 1Exercise and Nutritional Sciences, Deakin University, Burwood, Australia, 2Psychological Science, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Australia
13:45
7 CONTINUOUS OR BINGE ACCESS TO SWEET-FAT FOOD REDUCES MU-OPIOID RECEPTOR MRNA EXPRESSION IN THE NUCLEUS OF THE SOLITARY TRACT IN FEMALE RATS. N.T. BELLO , F. CASSEUS, M.T. CHUANG, B.A. MITCHELL, Z.W. PATINKIN, P. SINGH, T.H. MORAN . Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Dept. Psychiatry and Behavioral Sci., Baltimore, MD, USA
14:00
8 GHRELIN ALTERS THE APPETITIVE AND CONSUMMATORY RESPONSE TO LEARNED CUES ASSOCIATED WITH FOOD. AW JOHNSON, MJ DAILEY, TH MORAN, PC HOLLAND. Department Of Psychological And Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
14:15
9 ORAL SENSORY STIMULATION WITH ALCOHOL LOWERS SERUM FREE FATTY ACIDS IN WOMEN MM JOOSTEN1, 2, K DE GRAAF2, RF WITKAMP1,2, HFJ HENDRIKS1. 1TNO Quality of Life, Zeist, Netherlands, 2Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands
14:30
10 NORADRENERGIC NEURONS OF THE AREA POSTREMA MEDIATE AMYLIN'S ANORECTIC ACTION CS POTES, T RIEDIGER, TA LUTZ. Institute of Veterinary Physiology, Zurich Center for Integrative Human Physiology, Zurich University, Zurich, Switzerland
14:45
11 THE EFFECT OF FAILURE TO CONFORM TO A SOCIAL NORM FOR APPROPRIATE EATING ON SELF-PERCEPTIONS S ROYAL1, P PLINER2. 1Ryerson University, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2University of Toronto, Mississauga, ON, Canada
15:00
12 ENHANCED POSTPRANDIAL PYY, GLP-1, AMYLIN, SUPPRESSION OF GHRELIN, AND RESTORATION OF GLUCOSE HOMEOSTASIS IN A RAT MODEL FOR ROUX-EN-Y GASTRIC BYPASS SURGERY AC SHIN1, H ZHENG1, RL TOWNSEND1, DL SIGALET2, HR BERTHOUD1. 1Neurobiology of Nutrition Laboratory, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, LSU System, Baton Rouge, LA, USA, 2Department of Surgery, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
15:15
13 OLFACTION IS CRITICAL FOR CONDITIONED SUCROSE PREFERENCE IN SWEET-TASTE IMPAIRED T1R3 KNOCKOUT MICE S ZUKERMAN1, K TOUZANI1, RF MARGOLSKEE2, A SCLAFANI1. 1Brooklyn College CUNY, Brooklyn, NY, USA, 2Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA
15:30 – 16:00 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
16:00 – 17:00 Mayfair Room NIH WORKSHOP FOR POSTDOCS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS
JUDY PODSKALNY TRAINING PROGRAM NIDDK Chair: Kellie Tamashiro, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
17:00 – 19:00 Poster Area POSTER SESSION I
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
9 9
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2009
8:15 – 9:00 Kent Room CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
9:00 – 10:30 Mayfair Room ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION – REWARD
Chair: Allen Levine, University of Minnesota, CFANS, St. Paul, MN, USA 09:00
63 DOPAMINE-RELATED GENOTYPES MODERATE RELATION BETWEEN REWARD CIRCUITRY ACTIVATION AND WEIGHT GAIN: A PROSPECTIVE FMRI STUDY E STICE1, 2, S SPOOR1, 2, C BOHON1, 3, CN MARTI2. 1Oregon Research Institute, Eugene, OR, USA, 2University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA, 3University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA
09:15
64 INHIBITION OF MIDBRAIN LEPTIN RECEPTOR EXPRESSION AUGMENTS SUCROSE REINFORCED BEHAVIOR AND MESOLIMBIC DOPAMINE IN THE RAT JF DAVIS1, DL CHOI1, ME FITZGERALD1, JD SHURDAK1, DJ CLEGG2, JW LIPTON1, DP FIGLEWICZ3, SC BENOIT1. 1University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 2University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, TX, USA, 3University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
09:30
65 TAQIA A1 POLYMORPHISM ASSOCIATED WITH ATTENUATED NIGROTHALAMOCORTICAL RESPONSE DURING FOOD CONSUMPTION JA FELSTED1, I DE ARAUJO 1,2, DM SMALL1,2. 1The John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, CT, USA, 2Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
09:45
66 EFFECT OF THE MELANIN CONCENTRATING HORMONE 1 (MCH 1) RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST SNAP 94847 ON FOOD SELF-ADMINISTRATION AND RELAPSE TO FOOD SEEKING SG NAIR, T ADAMS-DEUTSCH, CL PICKENS, Y SHAHAM. NIDA/IRP, NIH/DHHS, Baltimore, MD, USA
10:00
67 INTRA-ACCUMBENS SCOPOLAMINE DECREASES FOOD INTAKE WITHOUT AFFECTING FOOD-SEEKING BEHAVIORS ML PERRY1, BA BALDO2. 1Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI, USA, 2Department of Psychiatiry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI, USA
10:15
68 MEAL INDUCED CHANGES IN BOLD FMRI ACTIVITY IN THE RODENT BRAIN. DK MIN1, UI TUOR2, HS KOOPMANS1, PK CHELIKANI1. 1Gastrointestinal Research Group, Faculties of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, Calgary, AB, Canada, 2Institute for Biodiagnostics (West), NRC, Faculty of Medicine, Calgary, AB, Canada
9:00 – 10:30 Crystal Ballroom
ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION – VISCERAL/VAGAL Chair: Matthew Hayes, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA 09:00
69 MERCAPTOACETATE (MA) INCREASES INTESTINAL VAGAL AFFERENT ACTIVITY M. ARNOLD, W. LANGHANS. Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
09:15
70 FOOD INTAKE, BODY MASS AND GUT PEPTIDE RESPONSES TO INTRAJEJUNAL INFUSIONS OF A FATTY ACID, PROTEIN OR GLUCOSE. MJ DAILEY, KLK TAMASHIRO, TH MORAN. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
09:30
71 EFFECTS OF THE DROPLET SIZE OF INTRADUODENAL FAT EMULSIONS ON ANTROPYLORODUODENAL MOTILITY, HORMONE RELEASE AND APPETITE IN HEALTHY MALES RV SEIMON1, TJ WOOSTER2, B OTTO3, M GOLDING2, L DAY2, TJ LITTLE1, M HOROWITZ1, PM CLIFTON4, C FEINLE-BISSET1. 1University of Adelaide Discipline of Medicine, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, Australia, 2Food Science Australia, CSIRO, Werribee, Australia, 3Gastroenterology Department, University of Munich, Munich, Germany, 4CSIRO Human Nutrition, Adelaide, Australia
09:45
72 CCK-1R REDUCES FOOD INTAKE IN SINGLE MEALS IN WOMEN HR KISSILEFF, JC THORNTON, I AXELSSON, SK HARRIS, F TARIQ, A SALUJA, K PALANCO. St. Luke’s/Roosevelt Hospital, New York, NY, USA
10:00
73 EFFECT OF INTRAPERITONEAL AND INTRAVENOUS ADMINISTRATION OF CHOLECYSTOKININ-8 AND APOLIPOPROTEIN AIV ON INTESTINAL LYMPHATIC CCK-8 AND APO AIV CONCENTRATION CM LO1,2, MR TUBB2, M LIU1,2, WS DAVIDSON2, SC WOODS1,3, P TSO1,2. 1Cincinnati Obesity Center University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 2Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 3Department of Psychiatry, Cincinnati, OH, USA
10:15
74 INTRAMEAL IP EXENDIN-9 (EX-9) INFUSION BLOCKS THE SATIATING EFFECT OF EXOGENOUS GLP-1, BUT ALONE FAILS TO INCREASE MEAL SIZE W. LANGHANS, E.B. RUTTIMANN, M. ARNOLD, N. GEARY. Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
10
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2009
10:30 – 11:00 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
11:00 – 12:00 Mayfair Room MARS LECTURE
Chair: Alan Watts, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
75 IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH: VASCULAR – NEURONAL PATHWAYS REGULATING HYPOTHALAMIC RESPONSES TO INFLAMMATORY INSULTS PAUL SAWCHENKO. Salk Institute, San Diego, CA, USA
12:00 – 13:30 Offsite Location TBD by Individual Groups
SSIB PROFESSOR-STUDENT LUNCHEON Pre-registration required; lunch destination decided by groups.
12:00 – 13:30 Break LUNCH
ON YOUR OWN
13:30 – 15:30 Mayfair Room ARE COMBINATION THERAPIES FOR OBESITY SUPERIOR TO MONO-THERAPIES
Chair: Harvey Grill, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
13:30 76
DRUG COMBINATION THERAPY IN METABOLIC DISEASE -2 DRUGS, 2 SITES, 2 MECHANISMS MICHAEL COWLEY. Monash University, Victoria, Australia
14:00
77 WHEN ONE IS NOT ENOUGH: WEIGHT MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES COMBINING MULTIPLE ACTIVE PHARMACEUTICAL INGREDIENTS PHILLIP LARSEN. Lilly Co., Indianapolis, IN, USA
14:30
78 A SINGLE MOLECULE GUT HORMONE COMBINATION ELIMINATES OBESITY MATTHIAS TCHOEP. University of Cincinnati’s Obesity Research Center, Genome Research Institute, Cincinnati, OH, USA
15:00
79 COMBINATION THERAPY FOR OBESITY: INTEGRATED NEUROHORMONAL APPROACHES DAVID PARKES. Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc., San Diego, CA, USA
15:30 – 16:00 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
11 11
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2009
16:00 – 17:45 Mayfair Room ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION -
ASSOCIATIVE/LEARNING Chair: Graham Finlayson, Univ. of Leeds, Leeds, UK
16:00 80
THE IMPACT OF A WESTERN DIET ON HIGHER-ORDER DISCRIMINATION LEARNING AND BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER INTEGRITY IN RATS S E KANOSKI1,2, Y ZHANG3, W ZHENG2,3, T L DAVIDSON1,2. 1Department of Psychological Sciences, W Lafayette, IN, 2Ingestive Behavior Research Center, W Lafayette, IN, 3School of Health Sciences, W Lafayette, IN
16:15
81 EFFECTS OF PERCEIVED VOLUME ON ‘EXPECTED SATIATION’ AND SELF-SELECTED MEAL SIZE. JM BRUNSTROM, JM COLLINGWOOD. University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom
16:30
82 ASSESSMENT OF THE CANNABINOID-1 RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST AM251 AS AN UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS IN TASTE AVERSION CONDITIONING AND ITS EFFECTS ON MEAL PATTERNS IN RATS. CM MATHES, JC SMITH, AC SPECTOR. Florida State University Dept of Psychology and Program in Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, USA
16:45
83 LESIONS OF THE GUSTATORY PARABRACHIAL NUCLEUS BUT NOT THE THALAMIC OROSENSORY AREA ELIMINATE ANTICIPATORY CONTRAST FOR SUCROSE AND CORN OIL IN SHAM FEEDING RATS. NC LIANG, R NORGREN, PS GRIGSON. Dept Neural and Beh Sci, Col of Med, Penn State Univ, Hershey, PA, USA
17:00
84 PRE-EXPOSURE TO ENVIRONMENTAL CUES PREDICTIVE OF FOOD AVAILABILITY ELICITS HPA AXIS ACTIVATION AND INCREASES OPERANT RESPONDING FOR FOOD C Cifani1, A Zanoncelli2, M Tessari2, C Righetti2, C Di Francesco2, Mv Micioni Db1, R Ciccocioppo1, M Massi1, S Melotto1. 1department Experimental Medicine Public Health, Camerino, Italy, 2dept. Biology Neurosciences Cedd Glaxosmithkline, Verona, Italy
17:15
85 RESTRAINED EATING IMPAIRS THE ABILITY TO ACQUIRE FLAVOUR-NUTRIENT ASSOCIATIONS. MR YEOMANS, NJ GOULD, EJ BERTENSHAW, LC CHAMBERS. Department of Psychology, University os Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom
17:30
86 GLUCOSE-CONDITIONED PREFERENCES IN TASTE-IMPAIRED TRPM5 KNOCKOUT MICE DS GLASS1, RF MARGOLSKEE2, A SCLAFANI1. 1Brooklyn College CUNY, Brooklyn, NY, USA, 2Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA
16:00 – 18:00 Crystal Ballroom
SALT INTAKE: CONTROL AND CONSEQUENCES
Chair: Derek Daniels, Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY, Buffalo, NY, USA
16:00 87
BODY-BRAIN SIGNALING AND MECHANISMS FOR CENTRAL SYNTHESIS OF SALT APPETITE ALAN JOHNSON. University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
16:30
88 DIETARY SALT INTAKE ALTERS THE EXCITABILITY OF CENTRAL NEURAL NETWORKS SEAN STOCKER. University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA
17:00
89 WATER DEPRIVATION-INDUCED SODIUM APPETITE LAURIVAL DELUCA . FOAr, São Paulo State University, Araraquara, Brazil
17:30
90 OPPOSING ACTIONS OF ACE INHIBITION: CENTRAL VS. PERIPHERAL EFFECTS ON ENERGY BALANCE AD DE KLOET1, EG KRAUSE2, DH KIM2, RR SAKAI2, RJ SEELEY2, SC WOODS2. 1Neuroscience Graduate Program, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 2Department of Psychiatry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA
17:45
91 INTERACTIONS BETWEEN CENTRAL NUCLEUS OF THE AMYGDALA AND LATERAL PARABRACHIAL NUCLEUS IN THE CONTROL OF SODIUM INTAKE. GMF ANDRADE1, CAF ANDRADE1,2, LA DE LUCA JR1, PM DE PAULA1, JV MENANI1. 1Dept of Physiology and Pathology, School of Dentistry–UNESP, Araraquara, SP, 14801-903, Brazil, 2Dept of Biomedical Sci. – Unifal-MG, Alfenas, MG, 37130-000, Brazil
18:00 – 20:00 Poster Area POSTER SESSION II
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
12
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2009
7:45 – 8:30 Kent Room CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
8:30 – 10:30 Crystal Ballroom MATERNAL AND EARLY LIFE PRECURSORS TO
OBESITY: ANIMAL AND HUMAN STUDIES Chair: Linda Rinaman, Univ. of Pittsburgh, PA, USA
08:30 136
EATING BEHAVIORS OF CHILDREN IN THE CONTEXT OF THEIR FAMILY ENVIRONMENT TANJA KRAL. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
09:00 137
PROGRAMMING OF HYPOTHALAMIC CIRCUITS IN THE RODENT AND NONHUMAN PRIMATE KEVIN GROVE. Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, Beaverton, OR, USA
09:30 138
PRENATAL STRESS AND DIET INFLUENCES ON METABOLIC PROGRAMMING KELLIE TAMASHIRO. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
10:00 139
THE EFFECTS OF MATERNAL OBESITY ON ANXIETY, STRESS RESPONSE AND FOOD PREFERENCE OF JUVENILE JAPANESE MACAQUES EL SULLIVAN, K COLEMAN, KL GROVE. Oregon National Primate Research Center, Beaverton, OR, USA
10:15 140
HETEROGENEOUS WEIGHT GAIN BY INBRED MICE FED A HIGH-ENERGY DIET: INFLUENCE OF LITTER CHARACTERISTICS. MG TORDOFF, LK ALARCON, HT ELLIS, MP LAWLER. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA
8:30 – 10:30 Mayfair Room
ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION NTS/HINDBRAIN
Chair: Diana Williams, FSU, Tallahassee, FL, USA 08:30 141
SELECTIVE RNAI KNOCK-DOWN OF ESTROGEN RECEPTOR-α (ER-α) NEURONS IN THE NUCLEUS TRACTUS SOLITARII (NTS) ELIMINATES ESTRADIOL’S (E2) INHIBITORY EFFECT ON FOOD INTAKE IN OVARIECTOMIZED (OVX) RATS. L ASARIAN1, S THAMMACHAROEN2, TA LUTZ2, N GEARY1. 1Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH-Zurich , Zurich, Switzerland, 2Inst of Veterinary Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
08:45 142
ENDOGENOUS LEPTIN SIGNALING IN THE NTS IS REQUIRED FOR ENERGY BALANCE REGULATION MR HAYES, KP SKIBICKA, TM LEICHNER, KK BENCE, RJ DILEONE, HJ GRILL. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
09:00 143
HINDBRAIN CATECHOLAMINE NEURONS CONTRIBUTE TO THE GROWTH HORMONE BUT NOT THE FEEDING RESPONSE TO GHRELIN AJ EMANUEL, TT DINH, S RITTER. Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA, USA
09:15 144
NEUROTOXIC LESIONING OF OXYTOCIN-SENSING HINDBRAIN NEURONS ATTENUATES THE SATIETY RESPONSE TO CCK-8 JE BLEVINS1,2, MW SCHWARTZ2, BJ RUSSELL3, DG BASKIN1,2. 1Department of Veterans Affairs, Seattle, WA, USA, 2University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA, 3Advanced Targeting Systems, San Diego, CA, USA
09:30 145
AMYLIN DEFICIENT MICE HAVE DECREASED FIBER DENSITY IN AP-NTS PROJECTIONS T RIEDIGER1, A HERMANN1, A HEHL2, SG BOURET3, TA LUTZ1. 1Inst. Of Veterinary Physiol., University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Inst. Of Parasitol., University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 3The Saban Research Inst., Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, USC, Los Angeles, CA, USA
09:45 146
GHRELIN INHIBITS VISCERAL AFFERENT ACTIVATION OF CATECHOLAMINE NEURONS IN THE SOLITARY TRACT NUCLEUS (NTS). R J CUI, S M APPLEYARD. Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA
10:00 147
ORGANIZATION OF VAGAL AFFERENT INPUTS TO SINGLE NEURONS IN MEDIAL SOLITARY TRACT NUCLEUS: LIMITED DIRECT AFFERENT CONVERGENCE WITH C- / A-FIBER SEGREGATION. JH PETERS, SJ MCDOUGALL, MC ANDRESEN. Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA
10:15 148
EFFECTS OF INTERMITTENT INTRAPERITONEAL INFUSION OF EXENDIN-4 AND PYY(3-36) ON FOOD INTAKE AND ADIPOSITY IN DIET-INDUCED OBESE RATS RD REIDELBERGER1,2, AC HAVER1,2. 1DVA-NWIHCS, Omaha, NE, USA, 2Creighton University, Omaha, NE, USA
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
13 13
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2009
10:30 – 11:00 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
11:00 – 12:00 Mayfair Room MARS LECTURE
Chair: Marion Hetherington, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom
149 MINDLESS EATING BRIAN WANSINK. Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
12:00 – 14:00 Break
LUNCH ON YOUR OWN
12:00 – 16:00 Parliament 1-2
PRESS RELEASE INTERVIEWS (Invitation Only)
12:15 – 13:45 Parliament 4 INDUSTRY-ACADEMIA
LUNCHEON EXCHANGE (Invitation Only)
The 3rd SSIB Industry-Academia Luncheon Exchange for leaders from industry and academia. Organized by Allan Geliebter. Funded by an unrestricted educational grant from GlaxoSmithKline.
14:00 – 16:00 Mayfair Room GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERIES: UNDERSTANDING MECHANISMS OF WEIGHT LOSS
Chair: Hans-Rudi Berthoud, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA
14:00 150
BARIATRIC REGULATION OF EATING, ENERGY AND ENTEROINSULAR FUNCTION LEE KAPLAN. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
14:30 151
MODULATION OF APPETITIVE HORMONES AFTER GASTRIC BANDING AND ROUX-EN-Y GASTRIC BYPASS JUDITH KORNER. Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
15:00 152
ALTERED TASTE FUNCTIONS FOLLOWING ROUX-EN-Y GASTRIC BYPASS SURGERY ANDRAS HAJNAL . The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, PA, USA
15:30 153
EFFECT OF ROUX-EN-Y GASTRIC BYPASS SURGERY ON BRAIN ACTIVATION IN RESPONSE TO APPETITIVE CUES C OCHNER, S PANTAZATOS, E CONSEICAO, L PUMA, Y KWOK, S CARNELL, J TEIXEIRA, A GELIEBTER. NY Obesity Research Center, St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, NY, USA
15:45 DISCUSSION
16:00 – 16:30 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
14
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2009
16:30 – 18:00 Crystal Ballroom ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION
CNS/ADIPOSITY Chair: Ruth Harris, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA
16:30 154
CONTEXT-DEPENDENT EXPECTATION OF PALATABLE FOOD ACTIVATES THE OREXIN SYSTEM DL CHOI, JF DAVIS, ME FITZGERALD, SC BENOIT. Department of Psychiatry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA
16:45 155
PLASMA LEVELS OF ‘ADIPOSITY SIGNALS’ DO NOT REFLECT ADIPOSITY IN RATS COMPENSATING FOR UNDER- OR OVERWEIGHT JJG HILLEBRAND, V GLOY, W LANGHANS, N GEARY. Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH Zurich, Schwerzenbach, Switzerland
17:00 156
THE ADAPTIVE RESPONSE TO FORCED WEIGHT GAIN: A ROLE FOR LEPTIN? CL WHITE, MN PURPERA, CD MORRISON. Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge, LA, USA
17:15 157
“PERMANENT” DYSREGULATION OF CENTRAL LEPTIN SIGNALING RESPONSES TO PERIPHERAL LEPTIN IN PROGRAMMED OBESE IUGR OFFSPRING M DESAI1, L NAJAR2, G HAN1, E CASILLAS1, MG ROSS1. 1Dept. of Ob/Gyn, Harbor-UCLA Med. Ctr., Torrance, CA, USA, 2Institut Polytech Lasalle-Beauvais, Beauvais Cedex, France
17:30 158
PVN AND PBN IN PROSTAGLANDIN INDUCED FEVER AND ANOREXIA KP SKIBICKA, AL ALHADEFF, T LEICHNER, HJ GRILL. U of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
17:45 159
SITE-SPECIFIC STIMULATION OF BRAIN MELANOCORTIN RECEPTORS INCREASES BROWN ADIPOSE TISSUE (BAT) THERMOGENESIS VIA SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM (SNS) INNERVATION CH VAUGHAN, YB SHRESTHA, CK SONG, TJ BARTNESS. Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA
16:30 – 18:00 Mayfair Room ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION
ASSORTED TOPICS Chair: Michael Lowe, Drexel Univ., Philadelphia, PA, USA
16:30 160
IS DISINHIBITION A MODERATOR OR MEDIATOR OF EXERCISE-INDUCED WEIGHT LOSS? E BRYANT1, M HOPKINS2, P CAUDWELL3, J BLUNDELL3. 1University of Bradford, Bradford, United Kingdom, 2Leeds Trinity & All Saints, Leeds, United Kingdom, 3University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom
16:45 161
EATING LESS, WHILE BURNING MORE; ACUTE EFFECTS OF BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS DURING ENERGY RESTRICTION AJ SMEETS1,2, MS WESTERTERP-PLANETNGA1,2. 1Maastricht University, Dept Human Biology, Nutrition and Toxicology Research Institute Maastricht, Maastricht, Netherlands, 2Top Institute Food and Nutrition, Wageningen, Netherlands
17:00 162
IMPROVEMENTS IN WEIGHT, MOOD AND CVD RISK FACTORS IN DEPRESSED, OBESE PATIENTS TREATED BY LIFESTYLE MODIFICATION. LF FAULCONBRIDGE, TA WADDEN, LS JONES-CORNEILLE, DB SARWER, M PULCINI, L BERGELSON. University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA
17:15 163
DOSE-DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF CAFFEINE ON PHYSIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR IN ADOLESCENTS JL TEMPLE, AM DEWEY, LN BRIATICO, E CLARK. University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
17:30 164
HIGH-FAT DIET OFFSETS THE LONG-LASTING EFFECTS OF A FOUR-WK RUNNING WHEEL ACCESS ON FOOD INTAKE AND BODY WEIGHT IN OLETF RATS S BI, CE TERRILLION, P CHAO, TH MORAN. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
17:45 165
DOWNSTREAM SIGNALING MECHANISMS OF ARCUATE NUCLEUS MALONYL-COA IN THE HYPOTHALAMIC CONTROL OF ENERGY BALANCE S GAO1,2, A BARR1, M KEMM2, F HEGARDT3, T MORAN2, G LOPASCHUK1. 1University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada, 2The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA, 3University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
15 15
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2009
18:00 – 20:00 Poster Area POSTER SESSION III
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 2009
7:45 – 8:30 Kent Room CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
8:30 – 10:30 Mayfair Room ANOREXIA: DIVERSITY IN MECHANISM AND OUTCOME
Chair: Michael Cowley, Monash University, Victoria, Australia
08:30 216
THE FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE OF DEHYDRATION ANOREXIA ALAN WATTS. University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
09:00 217
BRAIN MECHANISMS OF INFECTION-INDUCED ANOREXIA WOLFGANG LANGHANS. ETH Zurich, Schwerzenbach, Switzerland
09:30 218
NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY OF ANOREXIA NERVOSA ANTON SCHEURINK. University of Groningen, Haren, Netherlands
10:00 219
HYPOTHALAMIC MECHANISMS IN CACHEXIA DANIEL MARKS. Oregon Health & Sciences University, Portland, OR, USA
10:30 – 11:00 Kent Room COFFEE BREAK
11:00 – 12:00 Mayfair Room MARS LECTURE
Chair: Barry Levin, VA Medical Center, East Orange, NJ, USA
220 PROGRAMMING SURVIVAL CIRCUITRY: NUTRITION, LEPTIN AND HYPOTHALAMIC DEVELOPMENT RICH SIMERLY. The Saban Research Institute, Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
12:00 – 14:00 Break LUNCH ON YOUR OWN
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
16
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 2009
14:00 – 15:00 Mayfair Room PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT SESSION: ALL THE ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS YOU WANTED TO
KNOW ABOUT YOUR FUTURE EMPLOYMENT, BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK YOUR MENTOR Chair: Tim Bartness, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA A Round Table Q&A With:
• Janet Guss (Non-Profit Science Investment firm—Ecotrust) • Mads Tang-Christensen (Small Industry- Gubra) • Tim Bartness (USA Professor) • Derek Daniels (New USA Assistant Professor) • Diana Williams (New USA Assistant Professor, Women’s Issues as Scientists) • Michael Selmanoff (NIH) • Marion Hetherington (European Professor) • Bert Bentham (Large Industry-AstroZeneca) • Dorothy Lagg (Large Industry, Women in Industry, Mars)
This round table will address questions from undergraduate and graduate students, and postdoctorals about what to expect in their future employment in academia, industry, advocacy and government. This is for undergraduate and graduate students and postdoctorals only. NO FACULTY OR Pis OF ANY FORM WILL BE ALLOWED (to allow for a more free form of communication).
15:00 – 16:05 Mayfair Room AWARDS SESSION
15:00 221
INTRODUCTION Tim Bartness, President
15:05 222
ALAN N. EPSTEIN AWARD Awardee: Derek Daniels Presented By: Alan Spector, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
15:35 222
DISTINGUISHED CAREER AWARD Awardee: Paul McHugh Presented By: Timothy Moran, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
16:15 – 17:15 Mayfair Room BUSINESS MEETING
19:30 – 23:00 Mayfair Ballroom BANQUET
Enjoy a dinner buffet, live music and dancing. The Gerard P. Smith Award will be presented.
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
17 17
POSTER SESSION I ABSTRACTS Poster Themes 100 – Estrogen 200 – Stress 300 – Psychological / Depression / Anxiety / Eating Disorders 400 – GLP-1 / GRP / Vagus-NTS / Ghrelin Theme 500 – Melanocortin / NPY / AgRP / Dorsal Hypothalamus
P100 14
ESTRADIOL METABOLITE STIMULATES BINGE EATING RK BABBS1, FHE WOJNICKI2, RLW CORWIN2. 1Penn State, Physiology, University Park, PA, USA, 2Penn State, Nutrition, University Park, PA, USA
P101
15 PROESTRUS RATS ON A HIGH-FAT DIET HAVE LESS CENTRAL INFLAMMATION THAN MALE RATS. LM BROWN1, PT COONEY1, CN MILLER1, DJ CLEGG2. 1Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC, USA, 2University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine, Dallas, TX, USA
P102
16 BEHAVIORAL AND METABOLIC EFFECTS OF PERIPHERALLY ADMINISTERED OLANZAPINE AND TOPIRAMATE IN MALE AND FEMALE RATS. SS EVERS, F CALCAGNOLI, G VAN DIJK, AJW SCHEURINK. Dept. of Neuroendocrinology, Groningen, Netherlands
P103
17 ESTROGEN AND HINDBRAIN ACTIVATION IN RESPONSE TO SODIUM LOSS IN RATS L FAN, KS CURTIS. Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA
P104
18 CENTRAL UROCORTIN 2 ANOREXIA IS ATTENUATED BY HIGH FAT DIET ACCESS AND OBESITY RISK GENOTYPE IN FEMALE RATS EM FEKETE1,2,3, P COTTONE1,2, JB FRIHAUF1,2, V SABINO1,2, B LEOS1,2, EP ZORRILLA1,2. 1Committee on the Neurobiology of Addictive Disorders, TSRI, La Jolla, CA, USA, 2Harold L. Dorris Neurological Research Institute, TSRI, La Jolla, CA, USA, 3Inst of Physiol, Pecs Univ Med Sch, Pecs, Hungary
P105
19 ESTROGEN EFFECTS ON NEURAL ACTIVATION IN CIRCUMVENTRICULAR ORGANS IN RESPONSE TO HYPEROMOLALITY AB JONES, KS CURTIS. Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA
P106
20 POSTPRANDIAL PERIPHERAL N-ACYLETHANOLAMIDES ARE ASSOCIATED WITH FREE FATTY ACIDS BUT NOT WITH SENSATIONS OF APPETITE AND WELLBEING IN YOUNG NORMAL-WEIGHT WOMEN MM JOOSTEN1,2, RF WITKAMP1,2, HFJ HENDRIKS1. 1TNO Quality of Life, Zeist, Netherlands, 2Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands
P107
21 AN EXAMINATION OF THE MIXED PREFERENCE/AVOIDANCE RESPONSE TO SUCRALOSE IN MALE AND FEMALE RATS. GC LONEY, LA ECKEL. Program in Neuroscience, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
P108
22 ESTROGEN AND HSD2 LABELING IN THE NUCLEUS TRACTUS SOLITARIUS OF RATS MT NGO, JL HACKETT, KS CURTIS. Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA
P109
23 SELECTIVE ERα ANTAGONIST'S EFFECT ON FOOD INTAKE IN OVARIECTOMIZED AND CYCLING RATS. J. SANTOLLO, L.A. ECKEL. Program in Neuroscience, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
P110
24 ESTROGEN ENHANCES SUCROSE PELLET REINFORCEMENT H SHI1, JF DAVIS1, SC WOODS1, RJ SEELEY1, DJ CLEGG2, SC BENOIT1. 1Univ of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, 2UT Southwestern, Dallas, TX
P111
25 DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF GHRELIN ON SPATIAL LEARNING IN MALES AND FEMALES AL TRACY1, DJ CLEGG2, MH TSCHOEP1, SC BENOIT1. 1University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 2University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA
P200 26
ACUTE STRESS DECREASES FOOD REWARD RELATED BRAIN ACTIVITY J BORN1,2, S LEMMENS1,2, A NIEUWENHUIZEN1,2, E FORMISANO3, R GOEBEL3, M WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA1,2. 1Dept Human Biology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands, 2TIFood and Nutrition, Wageningen, Netherlands, 3Dept Cognitive Neuroscience, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
18
P201
27 FIRST HOURS FOOD INTAKE AFTER STRESS IS MARKER FOR ANTI-STRESS ACTIVITIES J CALVEZ1, G FROMENTIN1, D TOME1, N BALLET2, C CHAUMONTET1. 1UMR914 INRA-AgroParisTech, Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, Paris, France, 2Lesaffre Feed Additives, Marquette-lez-Lille, France
P202
28 THE EFFECT OF STRESS ON FOOD PREFERENCES FJ DIAZ, K FRANCO, A LOPEZ-ESPINOZA, A MARTINEZ, V AGUILERA, E VALDES. Feeding Behavior and Nutrition Research Center, Guadalajara University, Guzman, Jalisco, Mexico
P203
29 WEIGHT LOSS IS A MEDIATOR OF CARDIOVASCULAR AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO STRESS. EG KRAUSE1, J FLAK2, K JONES1, RR SAKAI1, JP HERMAN1. 1Department of Psychiatry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 2Program in Neuroscience, Cincinnati, OH, USA
P204
30 EFFECTS OF STRESS ON FOOD CHOICE AND INTAKE IN THE ABSENCE OF HUNGER SGT LEMMENS1,2, JM BORN1,2, F RUTTERS1, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA1,2. 1Human Biology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands, 2Top Institute Food and Nutrition, Wageningen, Netherlands
P205
31 STRESS DOES NOT AFFECT DETERMINANTS OF HEDONIC VALUE OF ACCEPTABLE FOODS. MJI MARTENS1,2, AG NIEUWENHUIZEN1,2, SGT LEMMENS1,2, JM BORN1,2, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTEGA1,2. 1Departement of Human Biology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands, 2Top Institute Food and Nutrition, Wageningen, Netherlands
P206
32 FOOD HISTORY AND SOCIAL STATUS AFFECT FOOD INTAKE IN MONKEYS V MICHOPOULOS, KN SHEPARD, M ARCE, J WHITLEY, MW WILSON. Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA
P207
33 INGESTION OF HIGHLY PALATABLE FOODS MODULATES C-FOS EXPRESSION IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS RESPONDING TO STRESS IN RATS SJ NOH, SB YOO, JY KIM, J-H LEE, JW JAHNG. Dental Research Institute, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Seoul National University College of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea
P208
34 EMOTIONAL AND EXTERNAL EATING ARE ASSOCIATED WITH POOR SLEEP QUALITY IN COLLEGE STUDENTS LJ NOLAN, SM JENKINS. Psychology Dept., Wagner College, Staten Island, NY, USA
P209
35 STRESS IMPACTS BRAIN ENCODING OF FOOD KJ RUDENGA1, R SINHA1, DM SMALL1,2. 1Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA, 2John B Pierce Lab, New Haven, CT, USA
P210
36 EFFECTS OF AMYLIN ON FOOD INTAKE, WEIGHT GAIN AND BODY COMPOSITION FOLLOWING EXPOSURE TO CHRONIC SOCIAL STRESS KA SCOTT, SJ MELHORN, EG KRAUSE, RR SAKAI. University of Cincinnati, CIncinnati, OH, USA
P300
37 ANXIOLYTIC RESPONSE AFTER PALATABLE DIET CONSUMPTION BUT NOT FOOD RESTRICTION IN RATS J ALSIö1, C PICKERING1, E ROMAN2, J LINDBLOM1, HB SCHIöTH1. 1Department of Neuroscience, Functional Pharmacology, Uppsala, Sweden, 2Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Pharmaceutical Pharmacology, Uppsala, Sweden
P301
38 INTERMITTENT ‘BINGES' OF SWEETENED-FAT INTAKE SENSITIZE FEEDING RESPONSES INDUCED BY GABA RECEPTOR STIMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS SHELL B.A. BALDO1, L. PASCAL2, S. NEWMAN1, K. SADEGHIAN1. 1University of Wisconsin-Madison Dept. Psychiatry, Madison, WI, USA, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison Neuroscience Training Program, Madison, WI, USA
P302
39 ORAL SENSORY AND CEPHALIC HORMONAL RESPONSES TO FAT AND NON-FAT LIQUIDS IN BULIMIA NERVOSA. N.T. BELLO, J.W. COUGHLIN, G.W. REDGRAVE, T.H. MORAN, A.S. GUARDA. Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Dept. Psychiatry and Behavioral Sci., Baltimore, MD, USA
P303
40 BINGEING IS NOT NECESSARY FOR THE REINFORCING EFFICACY OF DIETARY FAT TO BE ENHANCED BY INTERMITTENT ACCESS RLW CORWIN, FHE WOJNICKI. Nutritional Sciences Dept., The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
P304
41 THE IMPACT OF BINGE EATING ON ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIOR IN THE RAT EA DUNCAN-VAIDYA, H MCGEE, AL BENNETT. Towson University, Departments of Biological Sciences, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry & Bioinformatics, and Psychology, Towson , MD, USA
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
19 19
P305
42 THE ROLE OF PERFECTIONISM ON EATING BEHAVIORS AMONG WOMEN WITH EATING DISORDER K FRANCO1, JM MANCILLA2, G ALVAREZ2, R VAZQUEZ2, X LOPEZ2, F DIAZ1. 1Feeding Behavior and Nutrition Research Center,CUSur, Universidad de Guadalajara, Zapotlán el Grande, Jalisco, Mexico, 2Eating Disorders Laboratory, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Tlalnepantla, Estado de Mexico, Mexico
P306
43 FOOD INTAKE AND BODY IMAGE SATISFACTION J F HAYES, K E D'ANCI, R B KANAREK. Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA
P307
44 MOOD CHANGES ASSOCIATED WITH CARBOHYDRATE QUALITY (CQ) DURING WEIGHT LOSS IT KAVANAUGH1, JC LOVEJOY2, M KESTIN2, MM GEHRKE2, PE EICHELSDOERFER2, PA PALMER2, KS MALKOÇ2, TL ROSE2, MA MCCRORY3. 1Bastyr University, Kenmore, WA, USA, 2Free & Clear, Seattle, WA, USA, 3Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA
P308
45 EFFECTS OF ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTIC OLANZAPINE ON FEEDING BEHAVIOR AND ENERGY METABOLISM M RUITER1,2, SAA VAN DEN BERG1, H PIJL1, JA ROMIJN1. 1Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands, 2TopInstitute Pharma, Leiden, Netherlands
P309
46 9-TETRAHYDROCANNIBINOL (THC) ATTENUATES WEIGHT LOSS IN AN ACTIVITY BASED MODEL OF ANOREXIA NERVOSA AN VERTY, MJ EVETTS, BJ OLDFIELD. Dept Physiol, Monash Univ, Melbourne, Australia
P310
47 DISRUPTION IN SATIETY SIGNALING IN PEOPLE WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA TAKING OLANZAPINE OR CLOZAPINE KR WARREN1, MP BALL1, ZS WARWICK2, LM ROWLAND1, DL KELLY1, RW BUCHANAN1. 1University of Maryland, School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA, 2University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Department of Psychology, Baltimore, MD, USA
P400
48 NOVEL INSIGHT INTO GHRELIN SECRETION IN RATS: NEW RAPID METHOD FOR BLOOD PROCESSING M GOEBEL, A STENGEL, L WANG, Y TACHE, JR REEVE. UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
P401
49 BLOCKADE OF ABDOMINAL VISCERAL NMDA RECEPTORS INCREASES FOOD INTAKE T HUSTON1, M COVASA2, RC RITTER1. 1Programs in Neuroscience and Dept. of VCAPP, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA, 2Dept. of Nutritional Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
P402
50 GASTRIC AND VAGAL AFFERENT GHRELIN SYSTEM IS ALTERED BY HIGH FAT (HF) DIET IN DIET-INDUCED OBESE RATS J LEE, C DE LA SERRE, HE RAYBOULD. University of California, Davis, DAVIS, CA, USA
P403
51 HINDBRAIN AMP KINASE AND GLUCOPRIVIC FEEDING A.-J LI, Q. WANG, S. RITTER. Programs in Neuroscience, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA
P404
52 EVIDENCE FOR A ROLE OF THE HINDBRAIN IN THE SATIATING EFFECT OF HEPATIC PORTAL VEIN (HPV) INFUSIONS OF GLUCAGON-LIKE PEPTIDE-1 (GLP)-1 IN RATS G PACHECO-LóPEZ, I BAUMGARTNER, L ASARIAN, N GEARY, W LANGHANS, J G HILLEBRAND. Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
P405
53 VISCEROSENSORY PROJECTIONS FROM THE NUCLEUS OF THE SOLITARY TRACT TO BRAIN REGIONS INVOLVED IN FEEDING AND ENERGY HOMEOSTASIS: ANTEROGRADE TRACING AND IMMUNOCYTOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS L. RINAMAN, H. BAKALLI, V. MALDOVAN DZMURA. University of Pittsburgh, Dept. of Neuroscience, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
P406
54 MULTI-DAY ADMINISTRATION OF THE GLP-1 AGONIST, EXENDIN-4, REDUCES FOOD INTAKE AND BODY WEIGHT AND PREVENTS FASTING RELATED ALTERATIONS IN HYPOTHALAMIC GENE EXPRESSION. CE TERRILLION, MJ DAILEY, KLK TAMASHIRO, TH MORAN. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
P407
55 GASTRIN RELEASING PEPTIDE ACTIVATES THE DORSAL VAGAL COMPLEX AND THE SUBMUCOSAL PLEXUS OF THE JEJUNUM IN THE RAT MC WASHINGTON1, C LARSEN1, JR REEVE2, AI SAYEGH1. 1College of Vet Med, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, AL, USA, 2UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, USA
P408
56 CIRCULATING GLP-1 AND CCK-8 REDUCE FOOD INTAKE BY NON-VAGAL MECHANISMS J ZHANG, RC RITTER. Programs in Neuroscience, Dept. of VCAPP, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA
P500
57 MICROARRAY ANALYSIS OF GENE EXPRESSION IN NEUROPEPTIDE Y EXPRESSING NEURONS OF THE DORSOMEDIAL NUCLEUS OF THE HYPOTHALAMUS S DRAPER, M KIRIGITI, M GLAVAS, B GRAYSON, B JIANG, MS SMITH, K GROVE. Oregon national primate research center, Beaverton, OR, USA
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
20
P501
58 CHRONIC SUCROSE INTAKE REDUCES SATIETY-RELATED ACTIVITY IN HYPOTHALAMIC OXYTOCIN NEURONS. BA GOSNELL1, PK OLSZEWSKI2, HB SCHIOTH2, MK GRACE1, AS LEVINE1. 1U. of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA, 2Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
P502
59 IDENTIFICATION OF MELANOCORTIN RECEPTOR SUBTYPES INVOLVED IN LIPOLYSIS IN MURINE 3T3-L1 ADIPOCYTES. AC MØLLER, K RAUN, ML JACOBSEN, BS WULFF. Novo Nordisk A/S, Denmark, Maaloev, Denmark
P503
60 FOS EXPRESSION IN BRAIN OF MC4R, MC3R, AND DOUBLE RECEPTOR KNOCKOUT MICE IN RESPONSE TO CCK, BN OR MTII. NE ROWLAND, K ROBERTSON, D MCLEOD, C HASKELL-LUEVANO. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
P504
61 HYPOTHALAMUS/PITUITARY/ADRENAL (HPA) AXIS FUNCTIONING IN RELATION TO BODY FAT DISTRIBUTION F RUTTERS, AG NIEUWENHUIZEN, SGT LEMMENS, JM BORN, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA. Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands
P505
62 SYNPHILIN-1 REGULATES AMPK SIGNALING G ZHU, X LI, Z LIU, CA ROSS, TH MORAN, WW SMITH. Department of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
POSTER SESSION II ABSTRACTS Poster Themes 100 - Reward/Motivation 200 - Associative / Learning 300 - Taste 400 - Salt / Water / Beverage Intake 500 - Glycemic Index 600 - Exercise / Physical Activity
P100 92
POST-ORAL INFUSION SITES THAT SUPPORT GLUCOSE-CONDITIONED FLAVOR PREFERENCES IN RATS K ACKROFF, Y-M YIIN, A SCLAFANI. Brooklyn College CUNY, Brooklyn, NY, USA
P101
93 FOOD DEMAND OF MC4-R AND MC3-R KNOCKOUT, AND DOUBLE KNOCKOUT MICE UNDER FIXED RATIO COSTS FOR FOOD D ATALAYER, NE ROWLAND, C HASKELL-LUEVANO. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
P102
94 PREFERENCE FOR A HIGH FAT DIET, BUT NOT HYPERPHAGIA FOLLOWING ACTIVATION OF MU OPIOID RECEPTORS IS BLOCKED IN AGRP KNOCKOUT MICE MJ BARNES, G ARGYROPOULOS, GA BRAY. Pennington Biomedical Research Center , Baton Rouge, LA, USA
P103
95 STIMULUS SPECIFICITY OF HABITUATION OF MOTIVATED RESPONDING FOR FOOD LH EPSTEIN1, JL ROBINSON1, JN ROEMMICH1, AL MARUSEWSKI1, LG ROBA1, ME BOUTON2. 1University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA, 2University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA
P104 96
FOOD REINFORCEMENT AND ENERGY INTAKE IN OBESE AND NONOBESE ADULTS LH EPSTEIN, KK DEARING, LG ROBA, JL TEMPLE, JJ LEDDY, RW ERBE. University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
P105
97 SUCROSE IS MORE POTENT TO PREVENT HABITUATION OF ACCUMBENS DOPAMINE RELEASE THAN CORN OIL A HAJNAL1, JE NYLAND1, NK ACHARYA1, DA KESSLER2. 1Penn State University, College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA, 2UCSF, School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA, USA
P106
98 OBSERVATION OF EATING INCREASES SENSORY-HEDONIC EVALUATION OF THE OBSERVED FOOD S HIGGS, A DAVIDSON. University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
P107
99 MCH AGONISM IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS SHELL INCREASES THE HEDONIC RESPONSE TO A SWEET STIMULUS IN RATS CA LOPEZ, B GUESDON, E PARADIS, D RICHARD. Hospital Laval Research Centre, Quebec, QC, Canada
P108 100
DAMGO-INDUCED STIMULATION OF µ-OPIOID RECEPTORS IN THE MPFC LEADS TO INCREASES IN FOOD INTAKE AND A FRAGMENTATION OF FEEDING MICROSTRUCTURE. JD MENA1, BA BALDO2. 1Neuroscience Training Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA, 2Dept. of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison , WI, USA
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
21 21
P109 101
LEARNED PREFERENCE FOR FLAVORS EXPERIENCED EARLY VS. LATE IN A NUTRITIVE MEAL KP MYERS, MC WHITNEY. Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA, USA
P110 102
NEONATAL MATERNAL SEPARATION MAY SUPPRESS DOPAMINERGIC ACTIVITY IN THE REWARD PATHWAY, AFFECT PALATABLE FOOD INTAKE IN RATS. SB YOO, V RYU, J-H LEE, JW JAHNG. Dental Research Institute, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Seoul National University College of Dentistry, 110-744 , Seoul, Korea
P200 103
OPERANT ACQUISITION OF FOOD COMPARED BETWEEN C57BL/6 AND DBA/2 MICE D ATALAYER, NE ROWLAND. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
P204 104
A TRAINING SESSION TO RATE APPETITE FEELINGS INCREASES THE ROBUSTNESS OF METHODOLOGY N HANET, S SALAH, A LLUCH. Danone Research, Palaiseau, France
P205 105
INSTRUMENTAL LEARNING REINFORCED BY HUNGER IN RATS S JARVANDI1, DA BOOTH2, L THIBAULT1. 1School of Dietetics and Human Nutrition, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada, 2School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
P206 106
EFFECTS OF VIDEO GAME CONSOLE AND SNACK TYPE ON SNACK CONSUMPTION DURING PLAY J KOLKS, T WRIGHT, B RAUDENBUSH. Wheeling Jesuit University, Wheeling, WV, USA
P207 107
CAN LIKING OF A HEALTHY FOOD INCREASE WITH REPEATED EXPOSURE? MA MCCRORY1,2, JC LOVEJOY3, MM GEHRKE2, PA PALMER2, PE EICHELSDOERFER2, IT KAVANAUGH2, KE SCHENK2. 1Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA, 2Bastyr University, Kenmore, WA, USA, 3Free & Clear, Seattle, WA, USA
P208 108
ALTERED GENE EXPRESSION IN BRAINSTEM AND FOREBRAIN NUCLEI FOLLOWING TASTE AVERSION LEARNING. SK PANGULURI, RF LUNDY. Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, USA
P300 109
INTAKE OF FRUCTOSE AND SUCROSE SOLUTIONS AS A FUNCTION OF CONCENTRATION J.A. CASSELL, J.C. SMITH, T.A. HOUPT. Biological Science and Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
P301 110
ACUTE SURGES OF BLOOD GLUCOSE AFFECT PONTINE TASTE PROCESSING DIFFERENTIALLY IN LEAN AND OBESE RATS P KOVACS, A HAJNAL. Penn State University, College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA
P302 111
ROLE OF INTESTINAL ”TASTE” RECEPTORS IN THE REGULATION OF GASTRIC EMPTYING IN HUMANS TJ LITTLE, N GUPTA, RM CASE, DG THOMPSON, JT MCLAUGHLIN. University of Manchester, Section of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Salford, UK
P303 112
SACCHARIN CONSUMPTION DEGRADES SWEET TASTE-CALORIE RELATIONS IN RATS. AA MARTIN, A MEDER, SE SWITHERS, TL DAVIDSON. Department of Psychological Sciences and the Ingestive Behavior Research Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA
P304 113
THE VARIED INFLUENCES OF INTESTINAL ‘BITTER TASTE'ONINGESTIVE BEHAVIOR LA SCHIER1, 2, EM SWOVERLAND1, TL DAVIDSON1, 2, TL POWLEY1, 2. 1Department of Psychological Sciences, West Lafayette, IN, USA, 2Ingestive Behavior Research Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA
P305 114
ORAL AND POST-ORAL DETERMINANTS OF SWEETENER APPETITE IN MICE A SCLAFANI, S ZUKERMAN. Brooklyn College CUNY, Brooklyn, NY, USA
P306 115
ORAL ANESTHESIA REVEALS INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN FOOD-RELATED SENSORY INTERACTIONS DJ SNYDER, FA CATALANOTTO, PJ ANTONELLI, LM BARTOSHUK. Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
P307 116
RODENT HERBIVORES FED NOVEL BITTER PLANT COMPOUNDS REGULATE MEAL SIZE A-M TORREGROSSA1, A.V. AZZARA2, M.D. DEARING3. 1Florida State University , Tallahassee , FL, USA, 2Bristol Myers Squibb, Princeton, NJ, USA, 3University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
P400 117
A POSSIBLE ROLE FOR CENTRALα2-ADRENOCEPTORS ON THE INHIBITION OF SODIUM APPETITE BY ENDOTOXIN RL ALMEIDA, JV MENANI, LA DE LUCA JR.. 1UNESP - Faculdade de Odontologia de Araraquara - Fisiologia e Patologia., Araraquara, Brazil
P401 118
MOXONIDINE INTO THE LATERAL PARABRACHIAL NUCLEUS ENHANCES SODIUM BALANCE IN CELL DEHYDRATED RATS CAF ANDRADE1,2, GMF ANDRADE1, LA DE LUCA JR1, JV MENANI1. 1Dept of Physiology and Pathology, School of Dentistry – UNESP, Araraquara - SP, 14801-903, Brazil, 2Dept of Biomedical Sciences – Unifal-MG, Alfenas - MG, 37130-000, Brazil
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
22
P402 119
SODIUM AND WATER INTAKE BY RATS TREATED WITH LOW PROTEIN DIET PG BARBALHO1, AO DE JESUS1, JV MENANI2, LB DE OLIVEIRA1. 1Dept of Biological Sciences, DECBI/ICEB, UFOP, Ouro Preto, Brazil, 2Dept of Physiology and Pathology, School of Dentistry, UNESP, Araraquara, Brazil
P403 120
EVIDENCE FOR MULTIPLE INHIBITORY FEEDING SIGNALS IN DEHYDRATION ANOREXIA CN BOYLE, AG WATTS. University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
P404 121
RAPID GASTRIC EMPTYING WHEN HYPOVOLEMIC RATS DRINK WATER AND SALINE. MR BYKOWSKI1, KS CURTIS2, JC SMITH2, EM STRICKER1. 1Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 2Department of Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
P405 122
FOS EXPRESSION DURING SODIUM APPETITE. S DAYAWANSA, S MUNGARNDEE, R NORGREN. Dept. Neural & Beh. Sci., Col. of Med., Penn State Univ, Hershey, PA, USA
P406 123
FUNCTIONAL EVIDENCE OF HINDBRAIN MECHANISM FOR ALDOSTERONE-INDUCED SODIUM APPETITE. S FORMENTI1, G SCHOORLEMMER1, JV MENANI2, E COLOMBARI1,2. 1Dept Physiology, UNIFESP-EPM, São Paulo,SP, Brazil, 2Dept. of Physiology and Pathology, FOAr, Araraquara,SP, Brazil
P407 124
GASTRIC EMPTYING OF HEXOSE SUGARS IN HEALTHY HUMANS: EFFECTS OF OSMOLALITY AND MOLECULAR STRUCTURE A GOPINATH1, T LITTLE1, A MCGLONE1, E PATEL1, D LASSMAN1, S RHODES2, J MCLAUGHLIN1, D THOMPSON1. 1Manchester University, Manchester, UK, 2Salford Royal Hospital Trust, Manchester, UK
P408 125
EFFECTS OF GREEN TEA ON WEIGHT LOSS AND WEIGHT MAINTENANCE: A META-ANALYSIS R HURSEL, W VIECHTBAUER, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA. Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands
P409 126
GREEN TEA CATECHIN PLUS CAFFEINE SUPPLEMENTATION TO A HIGH PROTEIN DIET HAS NO ADDITIONAL EFFECT ON BODY WEIGHT MAINTENANCE AFTER WEIGHT LOSS R HURSEL, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA. Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands
P410 127
THE ANTI-DIPSOGENIC EFFECT OF GHRELIN DOES NOT REQUIRE THE NEUROPEPTIDE Y Y5 RECEPTOR E.G. MIETLICKI, D. DANIELS. Behavioral Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
P411 128
EFFECTS OF AGE ON DOCA SALT APPETITE IN RATS. RL THUNHORST, TG BELTZ, AK JOHNSON. Department of Psychology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
P412 129
DESENSITIZATION OF DIPSOGENIC ACTIVITY AFTER REPEATED ANGIOTENSIN II ADMINISTRATION P.J. VENTO, D. DANIELS. Behavioral Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
P500 130
SATIETY AND GLYCEMIC INDEX OF POTATOES IN RELATION TO OTHER CARBOHYDRATE-RICH TEST MEALS MI LEE, MA ABDILLAHI, J JONES, A GELIEBTER. The New York Obesity Research Center, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center and Columbia University - College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, NY, USA
P501 131
GLYCEMIC INDEX (GI) AND SATIETY: IS LOW GI REALLY SUPERIOR TO HIGH GI FOR PRODUCING SATIETY IN WOMEN? D LIYANAGE1, I EDIRISINGHE1, B BURTON-FREEMAN1,2. 1National Center for Food Safety & Technology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Summit-Argo, IL, USA, 2University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
P600 132
ALTERATIONS OF ENERGY EXPENDITURE FOLLOWING CENTRAL ADMINISTRATION OF INSULIN DETEMIR IN RATS PJ CURRIE1, C JOHN1, D WALL1, A GOTTSCHLICH1, FX PI-SUNYER2, JR VASSELLI2. 1Dept. Psychology, Reed College, Portland, OR, USA, 2Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
P601 133
EFFECTS OF SHAM INTOXICATION ON PHYSICAL PERFORMANCE USING THE NINTENDO WII FIT K FLEISCHMANN, T WRIGHT, M FOUTTY, B RAUDENBUSH. Wheeling Jesuit University, Wheeling, WV, USA
P602 134
VOLUNTARY EXERCISE AND CNS CONTROL OF ENERGY BALANCE. KA KRAWCZEWSKI, SC BENOIT, M TSCHOEP, S OBICI. University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA
P603 135
PHYSICALLY ACTIVE LIFESTYLE DOES NOT DECREASE THE RISK OF FATTENING KR WESTERTERP1, G PLASQUI2. 1Maastricht University, Maastricht, Namibia, 2Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
23 23
POSTER SESSION III ABSTRACTS Poster Themes 100 - Early Life 200 - Insulin / Leptin 300 - Cannabinoids 400 - Macronutrient / Intestinal Lumen 500 - Assorted Topics
P100 166
THE EFFECT OF FOOD PREFERENCES, FOOD INTAKE, AND TASTER STATUS ON BODY WEIGHT IN CHILDREN WITH AUTISM. AM DOOERFLINGER, HM HAUGHT. Marietta College, Marietta, OH, USA
P101 167
FLAVOR PREFERENCE CONDITIONING IN CHILDREN AND YOUNG ADULTS CA FORESTELL, AM SPAETH. The College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA, USA
P102 168
MATERNAL HIGH-FAT DIET INCREASES ADIPOSITY AND GLUCOSE INTOLERANCE IN ADULT OFFSPRING OF OBESITY-RESISTANT (DR) RATS JB FRIHAUF1,2, EM FEKETE1,3, EP ZORRILLA1,2. 1CNAD, TSRI, La Jolla, CA, USA, 2UCSD Neurosciences Group, La Jolla, CA, USA, 3Inst. of Physiology, Pécs University Medical School, Pécs, Hungary
P103 169
EFFECTS OF INCREASING THE PORTION SIZE OF FRUIT AND VEGETABLE SIDE DISHES AT A MEAL ON CHILDREN'S INTAKE REGULATION TVE KRAL1, AC KABAY1, LS ROE2, BJ ROLLS 2. 1University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2The Pennsylvania State University , University Park, PA, USA
P104 170
INTENDED USE OF CONTROLLING CHILD-FEEDING PRACTICES IS RELATED TO MATERNAL WEIGHT STATUS AND PLANNED CHOICE OF FEEDING METHOD MD LEE, AE BROWN. Dept Psychology, Swansea University, Swansea, UK
P105 171
SOCIAL INFLUENCE ON YOUTH FOOD INTAKE ANDCHOICE OF ACTIVITIES SJ SALVY. University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
P106 172
INCREASED EXPRESSION OF IGF2 AND GLUCOSE TRANSPORTERS IN PLACENTA OF MICE PRODUCED BY ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNIQUES (ART). K.L. TAMASHIRO1, K.A. SCOTT2, R.L. LEE1, J.B. POTASH1, T.H. MORAN1, R. YANAGIMACHI3, R.R. SAKAI2, Y. YAMAZAKI3. 1Dept. of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA, 2Dept. of Psychiatry, Cincinnati, OH, USA, 3Institute for Biogenesis Research, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, USA
P107 173
EARLY-LIFE SHORT-TERM VOLUNTARY EXERCISE ATTENUATES OBESITY IN ADULT OLETF RATS. A WELLER, M SCHROEDER, L SHBIRO, V GELBER. Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
P108 174
MATERNAL HIGH FAT DIET DURING DEVELOPMENT LEADS TO PANCREATIC ISLET EXPANSION IN THE NONHUMAN PRIMATE OFFSPRING SM WILLIAMS, JM BISHOP, DL TAKAHASHI, CJ OSMAN, KL GROVE. Oregon National Primate Research Center, Beaverton, OR, USA
P200 175
DIET AND TNF-α DIFFERENTIALLY REGULATE THE INSULIN RECEPTOR AND ITS TRANSPORTER AT THE BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER L ASARIAN1, SM ROBINSON2, N GEARY1, W LANGHANS1, WA BANKS2. 1Physiology and Behaviour ETH, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Dept of Internal Medicine, St. Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA
P201 176
PERSONALITY AS A RISK FACTOR FOR INSULIN RESISTANCE AND HYPERTENSION. GJ BOERSMA, T STEIMER, L BENTHEM, AJW SCHEURINK. Dept. Neuroendocrinology, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands
P202 177
REVERSAL OF HIGH-FAT DIET-INDUCED LEPTIN RESISTANCE BY DIETARY FRUCTOSE. PM CLINE, MJ AZAIN, RB HARRIS. University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA
P203 178
HYPOTHALAMIC NEURONAL PROGENITOR CELLS: DIVERGENT EFFECT OF LEPTIN AND INSULIN ON GROWTH AND DIFFERENTIATION M DESAI, T LI, E KEEN-RHINEHART, MG ROSS. Dept. of Ob/Gyn, Harbor-UCLA Med. Ctr. , Torrance, CA, USA
P204 179
SYSTEMIC LEPTIN ANTAGONIST INHIBITS HYPOTHALAMIC LEPTIN SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN NEWBORN RAT PUPS M DESAI1, L NAJAR2, G HAN1, E CASILLAS1, D JEAN3, G ARIEH4, MG ROSS1. 1Dept. of Ob/Gyn, Harbor-UCLA Med. Ctr., Torrance, CA, USA, 2Institut Polytech Lasalle-Beauvais, Beauvais Cedex, France, 3INRA, Univ. Paris-Sud , Paris, France, 4Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem , Jerusalem, Israel
P205 180
SELECTIVE CO-EXPRESSION OF INSULIN RECEPTOR SUBSTRATE 2 (IRS-2) IN SPECIFIC HINDBRAIN MONOAMINE CELL GROUPS. TT DINH, E NAMATAME, S RITTER. Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
24
P206 181
DIETARY CARBOHYDRATE INTERACTS WITH DIETARY FAT TO INFLUENCE LEPTIN RESPONSIVENESS IN RATS SJ HARING, RBS HARRIS. UGA, Athens, GA, USA
P207 182
ROLE OF TTF-1 IN THE HYPOTHALAMIC CONTROL OF HYPERPHAGIA INDUCED BY STREPTOZOTOCIN. JG KIM1,2, CH YUN1, BS PARK1, BJ LEE1. 1Department of Biological Sciences, University of Ulsan, Ulsan, Korea, 2Biomedical Research Center, College of Medicine, University of Ulsan, Ulsan, Korea
P208 183
SUBACUTE ENDOTOXEMIA TEMPORARILY IMPAIRS INSULIN SENSITIVITY AND BETA-CELL FUNCTION IN CATS M OSTO, E ZINI, M FRANCHINI, M ACKERMANN, CE REUSCH, TA LUTZ. University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
P209 184
β-MERCAPTOACETATE-INDUCED FEEDING IS NOT ALTERED BY ENDOGENOUS, CENTRAL OR PERIPHERAL LEPTIN. MF WIATER, S RITTER. Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA
P210 185
THE ROLE OF PLASMA LEPTIN IN THE RESPONSE TO AND RECOVERY FROM A 24-H FAST DL WILLIAMS1, MW SCHWARTZ2, BE WISSE2. 1Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA, 2University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
P300 186
CB1 RECEPTOR ANTAGONISM ALTERS THE ANXIOGENIC AND FEEDING-STIMULANT EFFECTS OF GHRELIN PJ CURRIE1, R KHELEMSKY2, C JOHN1, S HIGGS3. 1Reed College, Portland, OR, USA, 2Columbia University, New York, NY, USA, 3University of Birmingham , Birmingham, UK
P301 187
INTERACTION BETWEEN SEROTONIN AND CANNABINOIDS IN THE PARAVENTRICULAR HYPOTHALAMUS IN THE REGULATION OF FOOD INTAKE RE ESCARTIN-PEREZ1, AM CRUZ-MARTINEZ2, NM CENDEJAS-TREJO1, B GONZALEZ-HERNANDEZ3, B FLORAN-GARDUÑO2, JM MANCILLA-DIAZ1. 1Neurobiology of Eating Laboratory. UNAM, FES Iztacala, EDOMEX, Mexico, 2CINVESTAV IPN, Mexico City, Mexico, 3UANL, Monterrey NL, Mexico
P302 188
ENDOCANNABINOIDS REGULATE ENERGY BALANCE IN SIBERIAN HAMSTERS JM HO, GE DEMAS. Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA
P303 189
EVIDENCE FOR A NOVEL ROLE FOR THE CB2 RECEPTORS IN THE MEDIATION OF ENERGY INTAKE AND EXPENDITURE AN VERTY, BJ OLDFIELD. Dept Physiol, Monash Univ, Melbourne, Australia
P400 190
SYMPATHETIC SYSTEM CONTROLS FEEDING-INDUCED MOBILIZATION OF NAPE AND OEA IN THE SMALL INTESTINE J FU1, A GUIJARRO1, G ASTARITA1, GJ SCHWARTZ3, D PIOMELLI1,2. 1University of California, Irvine, CA, USA, 2Italian Institute of Technology, Genoa, Italy, 3Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA
P401 191
CD36 DELETION IS ASSOCIATED WITH DECREASED OEA PRODUCTION IN THE MOUSE SMALL INTESTINE A GUIJARRO, J FU, G ASTARITA, D PIOMELLI. Dept. Pharmacology, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA
P402 192
A PROTEIN AND FIBRE ENRICHED DAIRY PRODUCT CONSUMED AT BREAKFAST REDUCES SUBJECTIVE APPETITE OVER THE MORNING N HANET1, S SALAH1, J. SALAS-SALVADO2, A LLUCH1. 1Danone Research, Palaiseau, France, 2Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Reus, Spain
P403 193
PLASMA ENDOCRINE PROFILES DURING AND FOLLOWING MAINTENANCE ON A KETOGENIC DIET MA HONORS, BM DAVENPORT, KP KINZIG. Department of Psychological Sciences and Ingestive Behavior Research Center, Purdue University West Lafayette, IN, USA
P404 194
DIETARY FREE GLUTAMATE AS A MODERATOR OF GASTRIC EMPTYING, AND ITS EFFECT ON FULLNESS FOR LIQUID, SEMI-LIQUID AND SOLID MEALS IN HUMANS T IMADA, T TANAKA, M HIROTA, N MIYAMOTO, H UNEYAMA, K TORII. Institute of Lifesciences, Ajinomoto Co., Inc., Tokyo, Japan
P405 195
METABOLIC EFFECTS OF A HIGH FAT DIET DIFFER BETWEEN LIGHT VS. DARK PERIOD ACCESS. E OFELDT, N CARROLL, TH MORAN, EE LADENHEIM. Dept. of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sci., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
P406 196
NO DIFFERENCE IN THE SATIETY EFFECT OF DISGUISED PRELOADS WITH THE SAME ENERGY, VOLUME AND PALATABILITY BUT CONTAINING ONLY PROTEINS, CARBOHYDRATES OR LIPIDS. M POTIER1, G FROMENTIN1, A LESDEMA1, R BENAMOUZIG1, C MARTIN-ROUAS2, D TOME3, A MARSSET-BAGLIERI3. 1INRA, CNRH-IdF, UMR914 Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, Paris, France, 2SB Alliance – Direction de la Stratégie Produits, Viroflay, France, 3AgroParisTech, CNRH-IdF, UMR914 Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, Paris, France
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
25 25
P407 197
THE ABILITY OF AMYLIN TO REDUCE EATING DEPENDS ON THE PROTEIN CONTENT OF THE DIET T RIEDIGER, S MICHEL, K FORSTER, TA LUTZ. University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
P408 198
LOW CARBOHYDRATE INTAKE ONLY SHOWS A LARGER DECREASE IN BODY WEIGHT AND FAT PERCENTAGE IN THE PRESENCE OF HIGH PROTEIN INTAKE S SOENEN, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA. Human Biology, TIFN, NUTRIM, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands
P409 199
EATING BEHAVIOR AND LIFESTYLE CHARACTERISTICSWITHIN A SAMPLE OF VEGETARIAN AND NON-VEGETARIAN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS AM SPAETH, CA FORESTELL. The College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA, USA
P410 200
GLUCONEOGENESIS AND ENERGY EXPENDITURE AFTER A HIGH PROTEIN, CARBOHYDRATE-FREE DIET M VELDHORST, M WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA, K WESTERTERP. Dept. of Human Biology of Maastricht University and TIFN, Maastricht, Netherlands
P411 201
SUGARCANE-DERIVED POLYPHENOLS DECREASE DIET-INDUCED OBESITY RS WEISINGER1, DP BEGG1, M JOIS1, B GUIDICE1, D KANNAR2, B KITCHEN2. 1LaTrobe University, Melbourne, Australia, 2Horizon Science, Melbourne, Australia
P412 202
SINGLE PROTEIN CASEIN AND GELATIN DIETS INDUCE SIMILAR EFFECTS ON ENERGY EXPENDITURE, BUT DIFFERENT EFFECTS ON SUBSTRATE BALANCE AND APPETITE MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA1,2, A HOCHSTENBACH-WAELEN1,2, KR WESTERTERP1,2. 1Maastricht University, Maastricht , Netherlands, 2TIFN, Wageningen, Netherlands
P500 203
EVIDENCE THAT LPS ELICITS ANOREXIA VIA PGE2 SIGNALING IN THE MIDBRAIN RAPHE L ASARIAN, B KOPF, BH HRUPKA, N GEARY, W LANGHANS. Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
P501 204
EFFECTS OF CHOCOLATE CONSUMPTION ON PAIN PERCEPTION AND PAIN TOLERANCE S BONNETTE, K MCCOMBS, A STOVER, K WINTERS, B RAUDENBUSH. Wheeling Jesuit University, Wheeling, WV, USA
P502 205
POSTPRANDIAL RESPONSES IN HUNGER AND SATIETY ARE ASSOCIATED WITH A GENETIC VARIANT IN THE FTO GENE M DEN HOED, MS WESTERTERP-PLANTENGA, ECM MARIMAN, KR WESTERTERP. Maastricht University, Department of human biology, Maastricht, Netherlands
P503 206
INCREASED SAMPLE SIZE EFFICIENCY IN SMALL N ANIMAL RESEARCH. DA FITTS. Office of Animal Welfare, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
P504 207
INTRA-ABDOMINAL AND SUBCUTANEOUS FAT PAD MEASUREMENTS BY COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY IN RATS AND MICE JJG HILLEBRAND, W LANGHANS, N GEARY. Physiology and Behaviour Group, ETH Zurich, Schwerzenbach, Switzerland
P505 208
SYSTEMIC ADMINSTRATION OF SODIUM BUTYRATE INTENSIFIES LICL-INDUCED C-FOS AND PHOSPHO-ACETYL-HISTONE H3 IN THE AMYGDALA B.S. KWON, T.A. HOUPT. Biological Science, Florida State Univ., Tallahassee, FL, USA
P506 209
MEAL INTAKE OF HUMANS IS A FUNCTION OF THE NUMBER OF FOODS OFFERED. DA LEVITSKY. Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
P507 210
CONSUMER VIEWS OF HUNGER AND FULLNESS: A QUALITATIVE APPROACH MB MURRAY, ZM VICKERS. University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN, USA
P508 211
JAPANESE CONSUMERS' ”FOOD SELECTION CRITERIA” DIMENSION M OKANO1, M OKANO2. 1 Bunkyo University Women's College, Chigasaki, Japan, 2Bunkyo University, Chigasaki, Japan
P509 212
THE CONSUMPTION OF A PORTION OF CHEESE AS FIRST COURSE OF A MEAL DOES NOT IMPACT MEAL AND DAILY FOOD INTAKE. M POTIER1, G FROMENTIN1, R BENAMOUZIG1, D TOME2, A MARSSET-BAGLIERI2. 1INRA, CNRH-IdF, UMR914 Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, Paris, France, 2AgroParisTech, CNRH-IdF, UMR914 Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, Paris, France
P510 213
CATEGORIZATION OF HEALTHY AND UNHEALTHY FOODS: REACTION TIMES AND EXPLICIT RESPONSES M SIEGRIST, C KELLER. ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
26
P511 214
FOOD VISCOSITY INFLUENCES RESPIRATORY QUOTIENT, ENERGY EXPENDITURE AND CALORIC COMPENSATION IN RATS K.M. YACKLEY, T.L. DAVIDSON, S.E. SWITHERS. Ingestive Behavior Research Center and Department of Psychological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA
P512 215
MEAL PATTERNS, SATIETY, AND FOOD CHOICE IN A RAT MODEL OF ROUX-EN-Y GASTRIC BYPASS SURGERY H ZHENG1, AC SHIN 1, RL TOWNSEND 1, LM PATTERSON 1, D SIGALET 2, H-R BERTHOUD 1. 1Pennington Biomedical Research Center, LSU system, Baton Rouge, LA, USA, 2University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
27 27
SPONSORS AND EXHIBITORS
Ajinomoto. In 2009, Ajinomoto Group will celebrate the 100th anniversary of its founding. Now Ajinomoto is a globally recognized leader in food and amino acid production technology. Using the potential of amino acids like glutamate, our goal is not merely to make food everywhere taste better, but to take a scientific approach to improving diets for wellness and seek out solution to the nutritional, medical and environmental issue we all face.
Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc., is a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to improving lives through the discovery, development, and commercialization of innovative medicines. Amylin's scientists are primarily focused on investigating the potential utility of new peptide hormone candidates. Amylin presently markets two products for diabetes: SYMLIN® (pramlintide acetate) injection and BYETTA® (exenatide) injection.
AstraZeneca is a world leading pharmaceutical company with a world-class biologics capability. We are active in over 100 countries with major R&D sites in Sweden, the UK and the US. AstraZeneca employs over 65,000 people. Alongside our commitment to competitiveness and performance, we continue to be led by our core values to achieve sustainable success.
Bristol-Myers-Squibb is a global biopharmaceutical company dedicated to helping patients prevail against serious disease. Since 2002, we’ve introduced medicines for the treatment of psychiatric disorders, cancer, HIV, chronic hepatitis B and rheumatoid arthritis. Scores of investigational drugs are advancing through our development pipeline for such additional diseases as diabetes and cardiovascular disease, solid organ transplant rejection, Alzheimer’s disease and obesity.
Campbell Soup Company is a global manufacturer and marketer of high quality foods and simple meals, including soup, baked snacks and vegetable-based beverages. Founded in 1869, the company has a portfolio of market-leading brands, including "Campbell's," "Swanson", "Pepperidge Farm," "Arnott's," and "V8".
DYETS, Inc. prepares standards and custom modified cereal based, purified and L-AA diets, on a per order basis, for clients worldwide. DYETS also carries a full line of vitamin and mineral mixtures, liquid diets, drinking tubes and diet mixing equipment. Please call for further information regarding diet formulation, pricing and delivery schedules.
Elsevier is a leading publisher of science and health information, serving more than 30 million scientists, students, health and information professionals worldwide. Its products include journals, books and online resources. Elsevier authors benefit from fast journal refereeing and production times, with accepted articles available online within five days via ScienceDirect.
Givaudan is one of the most respected companies in the fragrance and flavour industry. Its rich heritage dates back to 1796, making it the first company to establish itself as a creator of tastes and scents. In 2008, the company achieved sales of CHF 4,087 million, with a work force of 8772 employees and subsidiaries in 46 countries. Givaudan's wide range of expertise is categorized under the following innovation pillars: Sensory Intelligence, Sensory Creation, Sensory Technology, and Sensory Science. By further developing these capabilities, Givaudan can accomplish its goal of becoming the Essential Source of Sensory Innovation.
GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare is one of the world's largest over-the-counter consumer healthcare products companies. Its more than 30 well-known brands include alli®, the only FDA-approved over-the-counter weight loss medicine; the leading smoking cessation products, Nicorette®, NicoDerm® CQ and Commit®; as well as many medicine cabinet staples, including Abreva®, Aquafresh®, Sensodyne,® Tums® and Breathe Right®.
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
28
Mars, Inc., is a private, family-owned company founded in 1911 employing 70,000 associates at more than 300 sites. Mars, Incorporated is one of the world’s largest food companies operating in six segments that produce some of the world’s leading brands. Popular Mars, Incorporated brands include: Chocolate – M&M’S®, SNICKERS®, DOVE®, GALAXY®, MARS®, MILKY WAY® and TWIX®; Petcare – PEDIGREE®, WHISKAS®, SHEBA®, CESAR® and ROYAL CANIN®; Wrigley – ORBIT®, EXTRA®, STARBURST®, DOUBLEMINT® and SKITTLES®; Food – UNCLE BEN’S®, DOLMIO®, EBLY®, MASTERFOODS® and SEEDS OF CHANGE®; Drinks – KLIX® and FLAVIA®; Symbioscience – WISDOM PANELTM MX, SERAMIS®, and COCOAPROTM .
The National Dairy Council® (NDC) is the nutrition research, education and communications arm of Dairy Management Inc™. On behalf of U.S. dairy farmers, NDC provides science-based nutrition information to, and in collaboration with, a variety of stakeholders committed to fostering a healthier society, including health professionals, educators, school nutrition directors, academia, industry, consumers and media.
Oregon Heath & Sciences University. The Obese NHP Resource at the Oregon National Primate Research Center was established to provide a resource to all scientists interested in studying diet induced obesity and associated complications in a complex model that develops the full spectrum of the disease
Purina LabDiet. Purina Mills is the International supplier of the LabDiet® and TestDiet® products used in lab animal nutrition. All products are manufactured in our ISO9001:2000 Certified plant in Richmond, IN. Diets are available in Standard, Certified, Autoclavable, Irradiated, Vac-Pak and Micro-Pak. Custom diets are also available upon request.
Research Diets, Inc. formulates and produces purified OpenSource Diets® for laboratory animals. Our nutrition scientists consult on custom diet formulations. The BioDAQ® Food and Water Intake Monitor features spill-reducing hoppers, mounts to home cage, records the time, duration, amount of each meal automatically. Data is interpreted using powerful analysis software.
Senomyx uses proprietary taste receptor-based technologies to discover and develop novel flavor ingredients. These include savory, sweet and salty flavor enhancers that enable the reduction of MSG, sugar and salt, as well as bitter blockers for potential food and pharmaceutical applications. Senomyx has partnerships with seven world-class food, beverage, and ingredient supply companies.
Unilever’s mission is to add Vitality to life. We meet everyday needs for nutrition, hygiene and personal care with brands that help people feel good, look good and get more out of life. Spanning the globe in home, personal care and foods products, no other company touches so many people's lives in so many different ways.
SSIB • PORTLAND
JULY 28 – AUGUST 1, 2009 • PORTLAND, OREGON
29 29
ATTENDEE DIRECTORY (PRE-REGISTRANTS ONLY) Rania Abou Samra Karen Ackroff Amy Ahern Roberto Almeida Johan Alsio Carina Andrade Myrtha Arnold Lori Asarian Deniz Atalayer Keith Babbs Devina Bajaj Brian Baldo Maria Barnes Timothy Bartness Denovan Begg Jeannemarie Beiseigel Nicholas Bello Bert Benthem Hans-Rudolf
Berthoud Joseph Beverly Sheng Bi Shawn Black James Blevins Gretha Boersma Jurriaan Born Kerri Boutelle Christina Boyle Lynda Brown Jeffrey Brunstrom Britt Burton-Freeman Elizabeth Capaldi Jennifer Cassell Melissa Chaney Prasanth Chelikani Chih-Yen Chen Derrick Choi Carlo Cifani Paul Cline Doug Compton Rebecca Corwin Michael Cowley Paul Currie Kathleen Curtis Megan Dailey Derek Daniels Terry Davidson Jon Davis Samantha Dayawansa John de Castro Annette de Kloet Laurival De Luca Jr. Lisandra De Oliveira Kelly Dearing Mina Desai Amber Dewey
Alicia Doerflinger Shin Draper Elizabeth Duncan-
Vaidya Lisa Eckel Indika Edirisinghe Alan Emanuel Leonard Epstein Rodrigo Erick
Escartin-Perez Simon Evers Liming Fan Lucy Faulconbridge Christine Feinle-
Bisset Eva Fekete Graham Finlayson Douglas Fitts Catherine Forestell Michelle Foster Megan Foutty Jennifer Frihauf Jin Fu Zachary Gallaher Su Gao Nori Geary Allan Geliebter Dorothy Gietzen Damien Glass Anupama Gopinath Blake Gosnell Ivana Grakalic Patricia Grigson Harvey Grill Kevin Grove Ana Guijarro Janet Guss Andras Hajnal Shuzhen Hao Samantha Haring Ruth Harris Heather Haught Matthew Hayes Marion Hetherington Suzanne Higgs Jacquelien Hillebrand Jacqueline Ho Mary Ann Honors Thomas Houpt Rick Hursel Toshifumi Imada Jeong Won Jahng Alan Johnson Alex Johnson Alexis Jones Michel Joosten
Robin Kanarek Scott Kanoski Paul Kievit Eiichiro Kimura Kimberly Kinzig Melissa Kirigiti Harry Kissileff Jonathan Kolks Peter Kovacs Tanja Kral Kimberly
Krawczewski Ellen Ladenheim Dorothy Lagg Wolfgang Langhans Byung Ju Lee Iching Lee Jennifer Lee Michelle Lee Sofie Lemmens Barry Levin Allen Levine David Levitsky Ai-Jun Li Nu-Chu Liang Tanya Little Dhanesh Liyanage Anne Lluch Chun-Min Lo Gregory Loney Carlos Lopez Michael Lowe Agnes Marsset-
Baglieri Alma Martìnez mieke Martens Ashley Martin Roy Martin Kristin McCombs Megan McCrory Paul McHugh Naomi McKay Jesus Mena José Menani Vasiliki Michopoulos Elizabeth Mietlicki David Min Tomoyuki Mine Anaya Mitra Cathrine Møller Timothy Moran Christopher Morrison Melinda Murray Sunila Nair Sarah Newman Seung June Noh
Laurence Nolan Ralph Norgren Jennifer Nyland Christopher Ochner Masami Okano Masao Okano Brian Oldfield David Pan Sivakumar Panguluri Byongseo Park David Parkes Lindsay Pascal Christine Pelkman Michelle Perry James Peters Pia Petersen Kimberly Plyler Catarina Potes Stefany Primeaux Carolyn Pritchett Bryan Raudenbush Kirsten Raun Helen Raybould Roger Reidelberger Denis Richard Thomas Riediger Linda Rinaman Robert Ritter Sue Ritter Heidi Rivera Michael Ross Neil Rowland Sarah Royal Kristin Rudenga Marieke Ruiter Femke Rutters Randall Sakai Sarah Salvy Jessica Santollo Ayman Sayegh Anton Scheurink Lindsey Schier Ellen Schur Anthony Sclafani Karen Scott Michael Selmanoff Haifei Shi Andrew Shin Yogendra Shrestha Michael Siegrist Richard Simerly Dana Sindelar Karolina Skibicka Dana Small Gerard Smith James Smith
M Susan Smith Wanli Smith Derek Snyder Stijn Soenen Andrea Spaeth Alan Spector Brent Stanfield Warren Starkebaum Judith Stern Scott Sternson Eric Stice Sean Stocker Amanda Stover Edward Stricker Myriam Stricker Elinor Sullivan Susan Swithers Diana Takahashi Kellie Tamashiro Mads Tang-
Christensen Jennifer Temple Chantelle Terrillion Jennifer Teske Brett Teubner Louise Thibault David Thompson Daniel Tome Michael Tordoff Ann-Marie
Torregrossa Andrea Tracy Cheryl Vaughan Margriet Veldhorst Peter Vento Aaron Verty Alan Watts Richard Weisinger Klaas Westerterp Margriet Westerterp-
Plantenga Jennifer Whitley Michael Wiater Diana Williams Sarah Williams Patricia Williamson-
Hughes Mark Wilson Katarina Yackley Martin Yeomans Steven Yeung Sang Bae Yoo Jingchuan Zhang Huiyuan Zheng Steven Zukerman
To register please visit
www.brainresearch2009.com
15 - 16 October 2009Hyatt Regency, McCormick Place, Chicago, USAwww.brainresearch2009.com
Supported by the journal Brain Research
Organized by Elsevier
Day 1
08:30 Welcome
Opening Session: Obesity: genetic neural and physiological substrates
08:45 Setting the problem, genetic contributionsSadaf Farooqi, University of Cambridge Metabolic Research Laboratories, UK
09:30 Neural substratesMichael Schwartz, University of Washington, USA
10:15 Refreshment Break
Developmental influences on energy balance
10:45 Development of hypothalamic pathwaysSebastian Bouret, Keck School of Medicine of USC, USA
11:30 Consequences of maternal obesity Kevin Grove, Oregon Health & Science University, USA
12:15 Developmental influences on genetic predisposition Barry Levin, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, USA
13:00 Lunch
Dorsal hindbrain integration
14:30 AutonomicHans Rudi Berthoud, Pennington Biomedical Research Centre, USA
15:15 Dorsal Hindbrain controls of energy balanceHarvey Grill, University of Pennsylvania, USA
16:00 Ascending neural pathways affecting energy balanceLinda Rinaman, University of Pittsburgh, USA
16:45 Wrap up
17:00 – 19:30 Poster session
Day 2
Energy homeostasis and the mesolimbic dopamine system
08:30 Neural substrates of reward Kent Berridge, University of Michigan, USA
09:15 Leptin actions on mesolimbic dopamine Martin Myers, University of Michigan, USA
10:00 Leptin and emotion Xin Yun Lu, Washington State University, USA
10:45 Refreshment break
Learning effects on eating
11:15 The amygdala and cue potentiated feeding Peter Holland, Johns Hopkins University, USA
12:00 Hippocampal modulators of ingestive behavior Stephen Benoit, University of Cincinnati School for Medicine, USA
12:45 Feeding anticipatory endocrine modulation Stephen Woods, University of Cincinnati School for Medicine, USA
13:30 Lunch
Modulators of ingestive behavior and obesity
14:30 Gender differences in metabolic controls Debbie Clegg, University of Texas Southwestern, USA
15:15 Combination therapies preclinical Jonathan Roth, Amylin Pharmaceuticals, USA
16:00 Physiological substrates Michael Rosenbaum, Columbia University Medical Center, USA
4:45 Closing remarks
Conference SecretariatRichard Hart Event Logistics Ltd Lawn Cottage, Owl Street, StocklinchIlminster, Somerset TA19 9JW, UKTel: +44 (0) 1460 259776Fax: +44 (0) 1460 258783 Email: [email protected]
Organizing committee:Charles Billington, University of
Minnesota, USA
Sadaf Farooqi, University of Cambridge, UK
Barry Levin, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, USA
Martin Myers, University of Michigan, USA
Timothy Moran, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Alan Sved, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Stephen Woods, University of Cincinnati, USA
Preliminary Program
A two-day satellite meeting prior to the Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting
A Brain Research Meeting
Neural Mechanisms of Ingestive Behavior and Obesity
www.givaudan.com
Simple Nutrition PrescriptionFruits, Vegetables, Whole Grains and Low-Fat and Fat-Free Milk and Milk Products
A
Copyright © 2007 National Dairy Council.®
The simplest advice is often the best advice – that’s why it’s still the best advice for your patients two years and older to eat more fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat and fat-free milk and milk products to get the nutrients that are often lacking in their diets.
So forget the here-today, gone-tomorrow trends that only seem to complicate and confuse matters –give your patients time-tested advice. Follow the steps outlined in the 2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans and emphasize increased consumption of the four “Food Groups to Encourage.”1 You'll helpyour patients get the key nutrients they need for a lifetime of good health.
Together with suggesting regular physical activity, that’s a prescription for success.
For more information on the USDA 2005 Dietary Guidelines and the health benefits of dairy foods,visit www.nationaldairycouncil.org.1U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005. 6th Edition. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office,January 2005. www.healthierus.gov/dietaryguidelines.com
DMI FGTE Ad 9/10/07 3:39 PM Page 1
Contact Information: Kevin L. Grove - Director
503-690-5380 [email protected]
39% Body Fat 18% Body Fat
Fatty Liver Disease Atherosclerosis Coronary Heart Disease Diabetes
OREGON NATIONAL PRIMATE RESEARCH
CENTER
http://www.ohsu.edu/xd/research/centers-institutes/onprc/ scientific-discovery/resource-programs/obese-nhp-resource.cfm Visit:
■ Multi Conditioning System
■ Fear Conditioning System Advanced
■ PhenoMaster – Fully Automated
High-Throughput Pheno typing System
Modular Automated In-Vivo Phenotyping
■ Startle Response / PPI System
[email protected] • www.TSE-Systems.com • www.PhenoMaster.com
TSE Systems, Inc. - A member of the TSE Systems International GroupUSA Toll free: Phone 1-866-466-8873 • Fax 1-866-467-8873, Germany: Phone +49-(0)6172-789-0 • Fax +49-(0)6172-789-500
Beh
avio
ral N
euro
scie
nce
– M
etab
olic
Res
earc
h –
Phe
noty
ping
Sophisticated
Life Science ResearchInstrumentation
Classical Dedicated Systems
SSIB-09.indd 1SSIB-09.indd 1 04.06.2009 15:59:52 Uhr04.06.2009 15:59:52 Uhr
Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc. is a proud sponsor of SSIB
Amylin is a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to improving lives of patients through the discovery, development and commercialization of innovative medicines.