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J Appl Physiol 99: 1214-1219, 2005. First published May 26, 2005; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00095.2005
8750-7587/05 $8.00
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HIGHLIGHTED TOPICS
Role of Exercise in Reducing the Risk of Diabetes and Obesity

Distinctive features of dietary phosphate supply

Anna Landsman, David Lichtstein, and Asher Ilani

Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel

Submitted 27 January 2005 ; accepted in final form 17 May 2005

Dietary phosphate has profound effects on growth and renal handling of the compound. On the basis of changes in growth rate and food intake, after alterations in phosphate load, our laboratory previously suggested that these effects are mediated by intestinal signals (Landsman A, Lichtstein D, Bacaner M, and Ilani A. Br J Nutr 86: 217–223, 2001). The aim of this study was to further evaluate the role of dietary phosphate on food intake and appetite and specific organ growth, and to test for the presence of a serum factor that may affect renal phosphate handling in phosphate-resupplied rats. The experimental design was based on a comparison between groups of rats receiving identical low-phosphate diets but drinking water containing either phosphate or chloride. We show that 1) changes in food intake after alterations in phosphate load occurred in parallel with variations in digestive system distention, suggesting that dietary phosphate has also a direct effect on appetite; 2) dietary phosphate-dependent growth has a specific effect on the growth of liver and epididymal fat; and 3) serum of rats supplied with phosphate contains a factor that inhibits sodium-dependent phosphate transport in a model of renal proximal tubule cells. Collectively, these observations are in accord with the hypothesis that factor(s) emanating from the digestive system in response to dietary phosphate load may be involved in growth, appetite and renal handling of phosphate.

low-phosphate diet; specific organ growth; sodium-inorganic phosphate transport; intestinal signals



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: Corresponding author: A. Ilani, Dept. of Physiology, The Hebrew Univ., Hadassah Medical School, P.O.B. 12272, Jerusalem, Israel, 91120 (e-mail: ilania{at}cc.huji.ac.il)







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