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1.
We investigated the effect of repetitive postnatal (2-7 days) intracerebroventricular administration of neuropeptide Y (NPY) on food intake and body weight gain in the 3- to 120-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats. NPY caused a 32% transient increase in body weight gain with elevated circulating insulin concentrations within 24 h. This early intervention led to the persistence of hyperinsulinemia and relative hyperleptinemia with euglycemia in the 120-day-old female alone. This perturbation was associated with 50% suppression in adult female hypothalamic NPY concentrations and a 50-85% decline in NPY immunoreactivity in the paraventricular and arcuate nuclei. This change was paralleled by a approximately 20% decline in food intake and body weight gain at 60 and 120 days. However, when exogenous NPY was stereotaxically reinjected into the paraventricular nucleus of the approximately 120-day-old adult females who were pretreated with NPY postnatally, an increase in food intake and body weight gain was noted, attesting to no disruption in the NPY end-organ responsivity. We conclude that postnatal intracerebroventricular NPY has long-lasting effects that predetermine the resultant adult phenotype in a sex-specific manner.  相似文献   

2.
The incidence of juvenile obesity is increasing at an alarming rate. In adults, central insulin administration decreases hypothalamic orexigenic neuropeptides, food intake and body weight more effectively in males than females. Mechanisms regulating energy balance in juvenile animals are inherently different from those in adults due to differences in growth rates and hormonal milieu. Therefore, we sought to determine if central insulin treatment in juvenile rats (4 wk) would have similar sex-dependent effects on food intake as those reported in adult rats. Twenty-four hour food intake was measured following icv saline or insulin (0.01 or 0.1 U) prior to the onset of dark phase of the light cycle. An additional set of animals was used to assess the effects of central insulin on hypothalamic orexigenic (NPY, AgRP) and anorexigenic (POMC) neuropeptide mRNA expression. In both males and females, insulin reduced meal size initially (first 4 h) and later decreased meal frequency (4-24 h) to reduce cumulative food intake. Consistent with this, central insulin decreased hypothalamic NPY and AgRP and increased POMC mRNA expression. In contrast to adult studies, there were no demonstrated sex differences. These studies indicate that juvenile females and males are equally sensitive to central insulin anorexigenic effects, perhaps due to a lack of circulating gonadal hormones. The anorexigenic responsiveness of both genders suggests a potential pharmacologic approach to childhood obesity.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the effect of daily intracerebroventricular (ICV) leptin administration (neonatal age 2-7 days) on hypothalamic neuropeptides (neuropeptide Y, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone) that regulate food intake, body weight (BW) gain, and the metabolic/hormonal profile in suckling (8 and 21 days) and adult rat (35, 60, 90, and 120 days). ICV leptin (0.16 mug.g BW(-1).dose(-1); n = 70) led to a postnatal decline in BW (P = 0.0002) that persisted only in the adult females (P = 0.002). The postnatal decline in BW due to leptin was associated with a decline in food intake (P = 0.01) and hypothalamic leptin receptor (P = 0.008) and neuropeptide Y (P = 0.008) immunoreactivities and an increase in alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (P = 0.008) immunoreactivity. In addition, hyperinsulinemia (P = 0.01) with hypocorticosteronemia (P = 0.007) occurred during the postnatal period with hypercorticosteronemia (P = 0.007) and hypoleptinemia (P = 0.008) and an increase in leutinizing hormone (P = 0.01) in the adult male and female progeny. Persistent hyperinsulinemia (P = 0.015) with hyperglycemia (P = 0.008) and glucose intolerance (P = 0.001) were observed only in the adult female. We conclude that postnatal leptin administration alters the adult female phenotype and speculate that this may relate to retention of leptin sensitivity resulting in a lipoatrophic state.  相似文献   

4.
In lactating rats, food restriction potentiates the already high levels of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY). To investigate the role that high levels of NPY might play in the prolongation of lactational infertility that typically accompanies a food restricted lactation we investigated the effects of chronic central infusions of NPY in ad libitum-fed lactating females. First, we compared the effects of intracerebroventricular (icv) infusion of NPY from Days 12-19 postpartum at a dose of 14.4 microg/day with a similar treatment in nonlactating females. In subsequent experiments we examined the effects of NPY infusions into the lateral ventricle at doses of 6 or 20 mug/day or unilaterally into the medial preoptic area at a dose of 1 microg/day from either Days 12-19 or 7-21 postpartum. Effects on food intake; female body weight; and, where appropriate, litter weight and length of lactational diestrus were compared between NPY and vehicle-treated females. As expected NPY infusion produced a robust increase in body weight and food intake in nonlactating females that was accompanied by a suppression of cyclicity. By contrast NPY treatment in lactating rats resulted in a marked decrease in litter growth and an earlier termination of lactational diestrus.  相似文献   

5.
Leptin and ghrelin are known to be main hormones involved in the control of food intake, with opposing effects. Here we have explored whether changes in the leptin and ghrelin system are involved in the long-term effects of high-fat (HF) diet feeding in rats and whether sex-associated differences exist. Male and female Wistar rats were fed until the age of 6 months with a normal-fat (NF) or an HF-diet. Food intake and body weight were followed. Gastric and serum levels of leptin and ghrelin, and mRNA levels of leptin (in stomach and adipose tissue), ghrelin (in stomach), and NPY, POMC, and leptin and ghrelin receptors (OB-Rb and GHS-R) (in the hypothalamus) were measured. In both males and females, total caloric intake and body weight were greater under the HF-diet feeding. In females, circulating ghrelin levels and leptin mRNA expression in the stomach were higher under HF-diet. HF-diet feeding also resulted in higher hypothalamic NPY/POMC mRNA levels, more marked in females, and in lower OB-Rb mRNA levels, more marked in males. In addition, in females, serum ghrelin levels correlated positively with hypothalamic NPY mRNA levels, and these with caloric intake. In males, hypothalamic OB-Rb mRNA levels correlated positively with POMC mRNA levels and these correlated negatively with caloric intake and with body weight. These data reflect differences between sexes in the effects of HF-diet feeding on food intake control systems, suggesting an impairment of the anorexigenic leptin-POMC system in males and an over-stimulation of the orexigenic ghrelin-NPY system in females.  相似文献   

6.
In an attempt to elucidate the effect of vanadium compounds on the gene expression of neuropeptide Y (NPY), vanadyl sulfate (VOSO4) was orally administrated at the dose of 1 mg/kg body weight into streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats (STZ-diabetic rats) three times daily for 1 week. We found a marked lowering of plasma glucose with a significant decrease of food and water intake in these STZ-diabetic rats treated with VOSO4, although the weight gain was unaffected. The increase of hypothalamic NPY, both the mRNA level and peptide concentration, in STZ-diabetic rats was also reduced by this oral treatment of VOSO4. However, similar treatment of VOSO4 in normal rats failed to modify the feeding behavior and hypothalamic NPY gene expression. These data suggest that decrease of hypothalamic NPY gene expression by VOSO4 is related to the recovery of hyperphagia in diabetic rats lacking insulin.  相似文献   

7.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a hypothalamic neuropeptide thought to play an important role in the regulation of food intake and energy expenditure. Our aim was to over-express bioactive NPY in the lateral ventricle by implanting cells transfected with NPY cDNA. Cells from the RIN 1056a clonal rat islet cell line were transfected with NPY cDNA. Radioimmunoassay, chromatography and receptor binding assays were used to ensure the secreted NPY was bioactive, before and after implantation. NPY cDNA transfected and untransfected control cells were encapsulated in PVDF hollow fibres to prevent tumour formation and implanted into the lateral ventricle of male Wistar rats. The effects on body weight and food intake were measured for 15 days. Animals implanted with NPY cDNA transfected RIN 1056a cells showed a greater rise in body weight than controls. This difference was statistically significant five days after implantation, and remained so until the end of the experiment. Cumulative food intake was also increased in rats implanted with NPY cDNA transfected RIN 1056a cells, but this difference failed to reach statistical significance. We have demonstrated that implantation of NPY over-expressing cells into the lateral hypothalamus of rats increases body weight gain.  相似文献   

8.
Corticotropin-releasing factor overexpressing (CRF-OE) male mice showed an inhibited feeding response to a fast, and lower plasma acyl ghrelin and Fos expression in the arcuate nucleus compared to wild-type (WT) mice. We investigated whether hormones and hypothalamic feeding signals are impaired in CRF-OE mice and the influence of sex. Male and female CRF-OE mice and WT littermates (4–6 months old) fed ad libitum or overnight fasted were assessed for body, adrenal glands and perigonadal fat weights, food intake, plasma hormones, blood glucose, and mRNA hypothalamic signals. Under fed conditions, compared to WT, CRF-OE mice have increased adrenal glands and perigonadal fat weight, plasma corticosterone, leptin and insulin, and hypothalamic leptin receptor and decreased plasma acyl ghrelin. Compared to male, female WT mice have lower body and perigonadal fat and plasma leptin but higher adrenal glands weights. CRF-OE mice lost these sex differences except for the adrenals. Male CRF-OE and WT mice did not differ in hypothalamic expression of neuropeptide Y (NPY) and proopiomelanocortin (POMC), while female CRF-OE compared to female WT and male CRF-OE had higher NPY mRNA levels. After fasting, female WT mice lost more body weight and ate more food than male WT, while CRF-OE mice had reduced body weight loss and inhibited food intake without sex difference. In male WT mice, fasting reduced plasma insulin and leptin and increased acyl ghrelin and corticosterone while female WT showed only a rise in corticosterone. In CRF-OE mice, fasting reduced insulin while leptin, acyl ghrelin and corticosterone were unchanged with no sex difference. Fasting blood glucose was higher in CRF-OE with female > male. In WT mice, fasting increased hypothalamic NPY expression in both sexes and decreased POMC only in males, while in CRF-OE mice, NPY did not change, and POMC decreased in males and increased in females. These data indicate that CRF-OE mice have abnormal basal and fasting circulating hormones and hypothalamic feeding-related signals. CRF-OE also abolishes the sex difference in body weight, abdominal fat, and fasting-induced feeding and changes in plasma levels of leptin and acyl ghrelin.  相似文献   

9.
Many mammals, nearing the end of life, spontaneously decrease their food intake and body weight, a stage we refer to as senescence. The spontaneous decrease in food intake and body weight is associated with attenuated responses to intracerebroventricular injections of neuropeptide Y (NPY) compared with old presenescent or with young adult rats. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that this blunted responsiveness involves the number and expression of hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) Y(1) and/or Y(5) NPY receptors, both of which are thought to mediate NPY-induced food intake. We found no significant difference in mRNA levels, via quantitative PCR, for Y(1) and Y(5) receptors in the PVN of senescent vs. presenescent rats. In contrast, immunohistochemistry indicated that the number of PVN neurons staining for Y(1) receptor protein was greater in presenescent compared with senescent rats. We conclude that a decreased expression and number of Y(1) or Y(5) receptors in the PVN cannot explain the attenuated responsiveness of the senescent rats to exogenous NPY.  相似文献   

10.
Consumption of a high-fat diet decreases hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) and increases proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and brown adipose uncoupling protein (UCP)-1 mRNA in obesity-resistant SWR/J but not obesity-prone C57Bl/6J mice. Although leptin was elevated in both strains in response to a high-fat diet, its role in the development of diet-induced obesity has remained unclear since insulin and other factors that affect similar tissue targets are altered. Thus, we administered recombinant leptin by subcutaneous infusion to chow-fed mice to mimic the changes in plasma leptin across its broad physiologic range. We observed strain differences in responsiveness to reduced and elevated leptin levels. A reduction in leptin during fasting evoked a greater response in C57Bl/6J mice by decreasing energy expenditure and thyroxin, increasing corticosterone and stimulating food intake and weight gain during refeeding. However, C57Bl/6J mice were less responsive to an increase in leptin in the fed state. Conversely, the leptin-mediated response to fasting was blunted in SWR/J mice, whereas an increase in leptin profoundly reduced food intake and body weight in SWR/J mice fed ad libitum. Sensitivity to fasting in C57Bl/6J mice was associated with higher hypothalamic NPY mRNA and reduced POMC and UCP-1 mRNA expression, while the robust response to high leptin levels in SWR/J mice was associated with suppression of NPY mRNA. These results indicate that differences in leptin responsiveness between strains might occur centrally or peripherally, leading to alteration in the patterns of food intake, thermogenesis and energy storage.  相似文献   

11.
Appetite is regulated by a number of hypothalamic neuropeptides including neuropeptide Y (NPY), a powerful feeding stimulator that responds to feeding status, and drugs such as nicotine and cannabis. There is debate regarding the extent of the influence of obesity on hypothalamic NPY. We measured hypothalamic NPY in male Sprague-Dawley rats after short or long term exposure to cafeteria-style high fat diet (32% energy as fat) or laboratory chow (12% fat). Caloric intake and body weight were increased in the high fat diet group, and brown fat and white fat masses were significantly increased after 2 weeks. Hypothalamic NPY concentration was only significantly decreased after long term consumption of the high fat diet. Nicotine decreases food intake and body weight, with conflicting effects on hypothalamic NPY reported. Body weight, plasma hormones and brain NPY were investigated in male Balb/c mice exposed to cigarette smoke for 4 days, 4 and 12 weeks. Food intake was significantly decreased by smoke exposure (2.32+/-0.03g/24h versus 2.71+/-0.04g/24h in control mice (non-smoke exposed) at 12 weeks). Relative to control mice, smoke exposure led to greater weight loss, while pair-feeding the equivalent amount of chow caused an intermediate weight loss. Chronic smoke exposure, but not pair-feeding, was associated with decreased hypothalamic NPY concentration, suggesting an inhibitory effect of cigarette smoking on brain NPY levels. Thus, consumption of a high fat diet and smoke exposure reprogram hypothalamic NPY. Reduced NPY may contribute to the anorexic effect of smoke exposure.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of running wheel exercise and caloric restriction on the regulation of body weight, adiposity, and hypothalamic neuropeptide expression were compared in diet-induced obese male rats over 6 wk. Compared with sedentary controls, exercising rats had reduced body weight gain (24%), visceral (4 fat pads; 36%) and carcass (leptin; 35%) adiposity but not insulin levels. Hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) proopiomelanocortin (POMC) mRNA expression was 25% lower, but ARC neuropeptide Y (NPY), agouti- related peptide, dorsomedial nucleus (DMN) NPY, and paraventricular nucleus (PVN) corticotropin- releasing hormone (CRH) expression was comparable to controls. Sedentary rats calorically restricted to 85% of control body weight reduced their visceral adiposity (24%), leptin (64%), and insulin (21%) levels. ARC NPY (23%) and DMN NPY (60%) were increased, while ARC POMC (40%) and PVN CRH (14%) were decreased. Calorically restricted exercising rats an half as much as ad libitum-fed exercising rats and had less visceral obesity than comparably restricted sedentary rats. When sedentary restricted rats were refed after 4 wk, they increased intake and regained the weight gain and adiposity of sedentary controls. While refed exercising rats and sedentary rats ate comparable amounts, refed exercising rats regained weight and adiposity only to the level of ad libitum-fed exercising rats. Thus exercise lowers the defended level of weight gain and adiposity without a compensatory increase in intake and with a very different profile of hypothalamic neuropeptide expression from calorically restricted rats. This may be due to exercise-related factors other than plasma insulin and leptin.  相似文献   

13.
It is noteworthy that exposure to opiates during fetal development results in permanent changes in adults related to morphological, behavioral and biochemical measures; however little is known concerning the effects of such drugs in early postnatal life. We investigated in newborn rats the effects of prenatal morphine-exposure on both—the hypothalamic metabolism of norepinephrine (NE), serotonin (5 HT) and neuropeptide Y (NPY)—the activity of the hypothalamo-pituitary gonadal and adrenal axes. In a previous study performed in newborns of untreated mothers, we reported some sex-dependent changes in the metabolism of NE, 5 HT and NPY in the hypothalamus and an early activation of the gonadostimulating function and of the corticostimulating one. In control newborns from saline-treated mothers, a slight increase in the hypothalamic metabolism of NE (males) and 5 HT (males and females) was observed and it was comparable in both sexes. On the other hand, the hypothalamic content of NPY was unaffected in early postnatal period in newborn males as well as in females. These changes observed on hypothalamic metabolisms are temporally correlated with the early postnatal activation of the corticostimulating function in neonates of both sexes and that of the gonadostimulating one, mainly in males. Prenatal morphine exposure altered the hypothalamic metabolism of 5 HT which was increased mainly in newborn females but did not affect either the metabolism of NE or the NPY content of the hypothalamus. The more drastic effect of the prenatal morphine treatment is the atrophy and hypoactivity of the adrenals in newborns of both sexes at birth time and during the early postnatal period. In contrast morphine did not impair postnatal surge of the plasma testosterone level in male pups as well as late and slight increase of plasma estradiol in female ones.  相似文献   

14.
Recent studies show that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) decreases feeding and body weight after peripheral and ventricular administration. BDNF mRNA and protein, and its receptor tyrosine kinase B (TrkB) are widely distributed in the hypothalamus and other brain regions. However, there are few reports on specific brain sites of actions for BDNF. We evaluated the effect of BDNF in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) on feeding. BDNF injected unilaterally or bilaterally into the PVN of food-deprived and nondeprived rats significantly decreased feeding and body weight gain within the 0- to 24-h and 24- to 48-h postinjection intervals. Effective doses producing inhibition of feeding behavior did not establish a conditioned taste aversion. PVN BDNF significantly decreased PVN neuropeptide Y (NPY)-induced feeding at 1, 2, and 4 h following injection. BDNF administration in the PVN abolished food-restriction-induced NPY gene expression in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. In conclusion, BDNF in the PVN significantly decreases food intake and body weight gain, suggesting that the PVN is an important site of action for BDNF in its effects on energy metabolism. Furthermore, BDNF appears to interact with NPY in its anorectic actions, although a direct effect on NPY remains to be established.  相似文献   

15.
Thyroid hormone regulates food intake. We previously reported that rats with triiodothyronine (T3)-induced thyrotoxicosis display hyperphagia associated with suppressed circulating leptin levels, increased hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) mRNA and decreased hypothalamic pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) mRNA. AMP-activated kinase (AMPK) is a serine/threonine protein kinase that is activated when cellular energy is depleted. We hypothesized that T3 causes an increase in hypothalamic AMPK activity, which in turn contributes to the development of T3-induced hyperphagia. Rats that were given s.c. injections of T3 (4.5 nmol/kg) had increased food intake 2 h later without alterations in NPY and POMC mRNA levels, but with increased hypothalamic phosphorylated AMPK (169%) and phosphorylated acetyl-CoA carboxylase (194%). To determine the more chronic effects of T3, rats were given 6 daily s.c. injection of T3 or the vehicle. Food intake was significantly increased. Multiple T3 injections increased hypothalamic phosphorylated AMPK (278%) and phosphorylated acetyl-CoA carboxylase (335%) compared to the controls. Intracerebroventricular administration of compound C, an AMPK inhibitor, blocked the food intake induced by a single or multiple injections of T3. Taken together, these results suggest that enhanced hypothalamic AMPK phosphorylation contributes to T3-induced hyperphagia. Hypothalamic AMPK plays an important role in the regulation of food intake and body weight.  相似文献   

16.
Hypothalamic concentrations of neuropeptide Y (NPY), a potent central appetite stimulant, increase dramatically in food-restricted and insulin-deficient diabetic rats. This suggest that NPY may drive hyperphagia in these conditions, which are characterized by weight loss and insulin deficiency. To test the hypothesis that insulin deficiency and weight loss are specific stimuli to hypothalamic NPY, we measured NPY concentrations in individual hypothalamic regions in rats with hyperphagia caused by insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Groups of 8 male Wistar rats were injected with ultralente insulin (20-60 U/kg) to induce either acute hypoglycemia (7 h after a single injection) or chronic hypoglycemia (8 days with daily injections). In hypoglycemic rats, plasma insulin concentrations were increased 6- to 7-fold compared with saline-injected controls; food intake was significantly increased with acute and chronic hypoglycemia and weight gain was significantly increased in the chronically hypoglycemic group. NPY concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay in 8 hypothalamic regions microdissected from fresh brain slices. NPY concentrations were not increased in any region in either acute or chronic hypoglycemia. NPY therefore seems unlikely to mediate hyperphagia in hyperinsulinemia-induced hypoglycemia, supporting the hypothesis that weight loss is a specific stimulus to hypothalamic NPY and that insulin deficiency may be the metabolic signal responsible.  相似文献   

17.
Maternal consumption of a fat-rich diet during pregnancy, which causes later overeating and weight gain in offspring, has been shown to stimulate neurogenesis and increase hypothalamic expression of orexigenic neuropeptides in these postnatal offspring. The studies here, using an in vitro model that mimics in vivo characteristics after prenatal high-fat diet (HFD) exposure, investigate whether these same peptide changes occur in embryos and if they are specific to neurons. Isolated hypothalamic neurons were compared with whole hypothalamus from embryonic day 19 (E19) embryos that were prenatally exposed to HFD and were both found to show similar increases in mRNA expression of enkephalin (ENK) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) compared with that of chow-exposed embryos, with no change in melanin-concentrating hormone, orexin, or galanin. Further examination using immunofluorescence cytochemistry revealed an increase in the number of cells expressing ENK and NPY. By plotting the fluorescence intensity of each cell as a probability density function, three different populations of neurons with low, medium, or high levels of ENK or NPY were found in both HFD and chow groups. The prenatal HFD shifted the density of neurons from the population containing low peptide levels to the population containing high peptide levels. This study indicates that neuronal culture is a useful in vitro system for studying diet effects on neuronal development and shows that prenatal HFD exposure alters the population of hypothalamic neurons containing ENK and NPY in the embryo. These changes may contribute to the increase in HFD intake and body weight observed in offspring.  相似文献   

18.
It is noteworthy that in the rat the early postnatal life is marked by an activation of both the corticostimulating function of the adenohypophysis in neonates of both sexes and of the gonadostimulating function mainly in males. In order to specify if such neuroendocrine variations are temporally correlated with changes in the hypothalamic metabolism of neurotransmitters, the hypothalamic metabolism of serotonin (5 HT), norepinephrine (NE), and dopamine (DA) and the hypothalamic content of neuropeptide Y (NPY) have been investigated in newborn rats of both sexes, delivered at term by cesarean section, as well as changes in the activity of both the hypothalamo-pituitary adrenal axis (HPA) and the hypothalamo-pituitary gonadal axis (HPG). Experimental data suggested that 1) in males a rise in hypothalamic metabolism of 5 HT, NE and DA occurs during the first two hours after delivery, whereas in females, only the metabolism of NE increases. Moreover, the postnatal metabolism of NE was higher in females than in littermate males; 2) NPY content of the hypothalamus, which was at birth significantly higher in males than in females, dropped in the former but not in the latter; 3) in newborn males, an early surge of plasma testosterone occurs, suggesting postnatal activation of the HPG axis; on the other hand, in females, a late and slight increase in plasma estradiol is observed; 4) in early postnatal life, a sex-independent rise in plasma ACTH and adrenal and plasma corticosterone levels suggest a comparable activation of the HPA axis in newborns of both sexes. In conclusion, the early postnatal activation of the corticostimulating function in neonates of both sexes and that of the gonadostimulating function, mainly in males, could be temporally correlated with a rise in the hypothalamic metabolism of two neurotransmitters, 5 HT and NE, and of NPY content. According to our data, a sex-dependent metabolsim of neurotransmitters in the hypothalamus is already apparent in early postnatal life.  相似文献   

19.
Increasing neuropeptide Y (NPY) signaling in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) by recombinant adeno‐associated virus (rAAV)‐mediated overexpression of NPY in rats, results in hyperphagia and obesity in rats. To determine the importance of hyperphagia in the observed obesity phenotype, we pair‐fed a group of AAV‐NPY‐injected rats to AAV‐control‐injected rats and compared parameters of energy balance to ad libitum fed AAV‐NPY‐injected rats. For 3 weeks, AAV‐NPY‐injected rats, received the same amount of food as ad libitum‐fed rats injected with control rAAV They did not gain more body weight than these controls. When allowed access to food ad libitum, these AAV‐NPY‐injected rats increased food intake, which subsequently decreased when rats reached the same body weight as AAV‐NPY‐injected rats that were fed ad libitum for the entire study. These data indicate that overexpression of NPY in the PVN results in obesity by increasing food intake until a certain body weight is achieved.  相似文献   

20.
Maternal deprivation (MD) during neonatal life has diverse long-term effects, including affectation of metabolism. Indeed, MD for 24 hours during the neonatal period reduces body weight throughout life when the animals are maintained on a normal diet. However, little information is available regarding how this early stress affects the response to increased metabolic challenges during postnatal life. We hypothesized that MD modifies the response to a high fat diet (HFD) and that this response differs between males and females. To address this question, both male and female Wistar rats were maternally deprived for 24 hours starting on the morning of postnatal day (PND) 9. Upon weaning on PND22 half of each group received a control diet (CD) and the other half HFD. MD rats of both sexes had significantly reduced accumulated food intake and weight gain compared to controls when raised on the CD. In contrast, when maintained on a HFD energy intake and weight gain did not differ between control and MD rats of either sex. However, high fat intake induced hyperleptinemia in MD rats as early as PND35, but not until PND85 in control males and control females did not become hyperleptinemic on the HFD even at PND102. High fat intake stimulated hypothalamic inflammatory markers in both male and female rats that had been exposed to MD, but not in controls. Reduced insulin sensitivity was observed only in MD males on the HFD. These results indicate that MD modifies the metabolic response to HFD intake, with this response being different between males and females. Thus, the development of obesity and secondary complications in response to high fat intake depends on numerous factors.  相似文献   

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