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1. QTLs influencing carbohydrate and fat choice in a LOU/CxFischer 344 F2 rat population

2. The Protein Status of Rats Affects the Rewarding Value of Meals Due to their Protein Content.

3. Dietary fibers solubilized in water or an oil emulsion induce satiation through CCK-mediated vagal signaling in mice

4. Compared with Raw Bovine Meat, Boiling but Not Grilling, Barbecuing, or Roasting Decreases Protein Digestibility without Any Major Consequences for Intestinal Mucosa in Rats, although the Daily Ingestion of Bovine Meat Induces Histologic Modifications in the Colon.

5. High dietary protein decreases fat deposition induced by high-fat and high-sucrose diet in rats.

6. Proteins Activate Satiety-Related Neuronal Pathways in the Brainstem and Hypothalamus of Rats.

7. Yeast proteins enhance satiety in rats.

8. Fos-Positive Neurons Are Increased in the Nucleus of the Solitary Tract and Decreased in the Ventromedial Hypothalamus and Amygdala by a High-Protein Diet in Rats.

9. Increasing the protein content in a carbohydrate-free diet enhances fat loss during 35% but not 75% energy restriction in rats.

10. Rats free to select between pure protein and a fat-carbohydrate mix ingest high-protein mixed meals during the dark period and protein meals during the light period.

11. Total subdiaphragmatic vagotomy does not suppress high protein diet-induced food intake depression in rats.

12. Body weight, body composition, and energy metabolism in lean and obese Zucker rats fed soybean oil or butter.

13. Daily delivery of dietary nitrogen to the periphery is stable in rats adapted to increased protein intake.

14. Comparison of energy balance in two inbred strains of rats: Fischer F344 prone to obesity and Lou rats resistant to obesity

15. Preabsorptive factors are not the main determinants of intake depression induced by a high-protein diet in the rat

16. Protein is more potent than carbohydrate for reducing appetite in rats

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