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Orexins (forms A and B) belong to a new family of peptides that, as neuropeptide Y (NPY), stimulate food intake when centrally injected. The ob/ob mouse is a well-characterized model of hyperphagia and obesity associated with strong metabolic disturbances and a central dysregulation of peptides involved in the control of feeding. In the present report, we investigated the hypocretin (Hcrt)/orexin (OX) peptide pathway in lean and ob/ob mice. Prepro-Hcrt/OX mRNA expression, measured by in situ hybridization was restricted to the lateral hypothalamus area. It was significantly decreased in ob/ob mice (-18%; p<0.01). When estimated by real time RT-PCR in the whole hypothalamus, this decrease amounted to 65% (p<0.001). Hcrt-1/OX-A peptide concentrations, measured by RIA in microdissected hypothalamic nuclei were high in the lateral hypothalamus (LH) and lower in the arcuate (ARC) and paraventricular nuclei (PVN). In ob/ob mice, OX-A levels were significantly lower than in lean mice in the LH (-34%; p<0.02) and in the PVN (-72%; p<0.005). Acute intracerebroventricular injection of Hcrt-1/OX-A (1-10 nmol) stimulated feeding in lean, but not in ob/ob mice, whereas Hcrt-2/OX-B (1-10 nmol) had the opposite effect. Acute third ventricle (i3vt) injections of Hcrt/OX peptides in ob/ob mice transiently increased their metabolic rate and stimulated lipid substrate utilization. These findings provide direct evidence that Hcrt/OX peptides are down-regulated in the hypothalamus of ob/ob mice, contrary to the NPY system. The present data argues that Hcrt/OX peptides are not primarily responsible for the metabolic syndrome of the ob/ob mice. The diminution in the OX tone might participate in a counterregulatory system necessary to limit the adverse effects of NPY on food intake and body weight.  相似文献   

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A Sahu  P S Kalra  S P Kalra 《Peptides》1988,9(1):83-86
We have studied the effects on neuropeptide Y (NPY) concentration in six hypothalamic nuclei, viz. medial preoptic area (MPOA), paraventricular nucleus (PVN), median eminence (ME), arcuate nucleus (ARC), ventromedial nucleus (VMN) and dorsomedial nucleus (DMN) of food deprivation (FD) for 2, 3, or 4 days or FD for 4 days followed by one day ad lib food intake (FI) in male rats. Hypothalamic nuclei were microdissected by the technique of Palkovits and processed for measurement of NPY immunoreactivity by RIA. NPY-like immunoreactivity in the ME, VMN and DMN was unaffected by FD or FI, but the remaining three nuclei--the ARC, MPOA and NPY--displayed a different pattern of changes in NPY levels in response to either FD or FD followed by FI. In the ARC, NPY levels rose significantly at day 3 and 4 after FD and remained elevated even after one day of FI. In the MPOA, while FD for 4 days had no effect, NPY concentration increased significantly in response to FI. In contrast, in the PVN, a site implicated in the control of feeding behavior, the NPY response to FD and FI was markedly different. FD elicited a gradual, time-related increase in NPY levels to reach highest concentration on day 4 and thereafter, following one day of FI, NPY levels fell dramatically to the range found in control satiated rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Kelley SP  Nannini MA  Bratt AM  Hodge CW 《Peptides》2001,22(3):515-522
The paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus is known to modulate feeding, obesity, and ethanol intake. Neuropeptide-Y (NPY), which is released endogenously by neurons projecting from the arcuate nucleus to the PVN, is one of the most potent stimulants of feeding behavior known. The role of NPY in the PVN on ethanol self-administration is unknown. To address this issue, rats were trained to self-administer ethanol via a sucrose fading procedure and injector guide cannulae aimed at the PVN were surgically implanted. Microinjections of NPY and NPY antagonists in the PVN were conducted prior to ethanol self-administration sessions. All doses of NPY significantly increased ethanol self-administration and preference, and decreased water intake. The NPY antagonist D-NPY partially reduced ethanol self-administration and completely blocked the effects of an intermediate dose of NPY (10 fmol) on ethanol intake, preference, and water intake. The competitive non-peptide Y1 receptor antagonist BIBP 3226 did not significantly alter ethanol self-administration or water intake when administered alone in the PVN but it completely blocked the effect of NPY (10 fmol) on ethanol intake. NPY infused in the PVN had no effect on ethanol self-administration when tested in rats that did not have a long history of ethanol self-administration. The doses of NPY tested produced no effect on food intake or body weight measured during the 24-h period after infusion in either ethanol-experienced or ethanol-inexperienced rats. These results indicate that elevation of NPY levels in the PVN potently increases ethanol self-administration and that this effect is mediated through NPY Y1 receptors.  相似文献   

7.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) injected into the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) is known to elicit a powerful feeding response in satiated, brain-cannulated rats [41, 42, 43]. The present experiment investigates the effect of peptide YY (PYY), a structurally-related peptide, on feeding behavior and, in addition, the effects of both PYY and NPY on the pattern of macronutrient selection. Injection of PYY directly into the PVN, in doses ranging from 7.8 to 235 pmol/0.3 μl, caused a strong, dose-dependent stimulation of feeding behavior, as well as a small stimulation of drinking behavior, in satiated rats. The mean latency to eat was 9.3 min, with substantial feeding occurring within 30 min of the injection. At low doses, the increase in feeding was seen predominantly during the first hr. At the highest dose, in contrast, food intake continued to increase progressively over the next few hr, such that by 4 hr postinjection food intake was more than 20 g over vehicle baseline. In 1 hr tests with 3 pure macronutrient (protein, fat and carbohydrate) diets simulataneously available, PYY and NPY (78 pmol/0.3 μl) both elicited a strong and selective increase in carbohydrate consumption, with little or no effect on protein or fat consumption. These results suggest that hypothalamic receptors sensitive to PYY and NPY may participate in the control of carbohydrate consumption.  相似文献   

8.
Chance WT  Xiao C  Dayal R  Sheriff S 《Peptides》2007,28(2):295-301
Although previous studies have implicated NPY in the etiology of experimental cancer anorexia, the results have been difficult to interpret. Studies have suggested that although NPY level and message were decreased in the dorsomedial hypothalamic area (DMA), they were elevated in the ventromedial hypothalamic area (VMA). To better assess specific intra-area alterations of NPY, Y(1) receptor (Y(1) R), and agouti-related peptide (AgRP) in TB rats, we used radioimmunoassay, quantitative real-time RT-PCR, and immunohistochemistry. We found that NPY and AgRP mRNA were elevated significantly in whole hypothalamus of anorectic TB rats, while Y(1) R mRNA was decreased. Based on two replicates of four pooled samples each, both NPY and AgRP mRNA appeared to be elevated in the VMA of anorectic TB rats, while only AgRP exhibited a similar increase in the DMA. Levels of NPY were elevated in the VMA of both TB and pair-fed (PF) rats, but in the DMA only PF rats exhibited a significant NPY increase. NPY and Y(1) R immunohistochemistry revealed reduced NPY staining in PVN and ARC nucleus of TB and PF rats. Y(1) R immunostaining was also reduced in the ARC and PVN of TB rats, while PF rats exhibited elevated immunostaining in the PVN. These results continue to implicate dysfunction of NPY feeding systems in experimental cancer anorexia and suggest down-regulation of Y(1) R receptors as well as possible problems in NPY translation.  相似文献   

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Neuropeptide Y (NPY), a peptide contained within numerous presynaptic terminals in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), was injected directly into the PVN of satiated, brain-cannulated rats, and food and water intake were measured 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 hrs postinjection. Neuropeptide Y (24 and 78 pmoles/0.3 microliter isotonic saline) caused a dose-dependent increase in food intake, as well as a small, dose-dependent increase in water intake. This effect on feeding occurred even when food was not presented until 4 hrs postinjection. To determine the behavioral specificity of this effect, the impact of PVN injection of NPY (78 pmoles) on various behaviors was observed. With food available, only feeding and drinking behavior were affected. No change in other behaviors, including grooming, rearing, sleeping, resting or different levels of activity, was observed. With food absent, NPY still elicited drinking, suggesting that this is a primary effect, rather than secondary to the feeding. In addition to drinking, NPY reliably increased activity while decreasing sleep and grooming. These results suggest an important role for hypothalamic NPY, or a structurally-related peptide, in the regulation of feeding and drinking behavior.  相似文献   

11.
Orexigenic neuropeptides NPY and AgRP play major roles in feeding and are closely related to obesity and diabetic metabolic syndrome. This study explored the inhibitory effect of rutecarpine on feeding and obesity in high-fat-diet-induced (C57BL/6) and leptin-deficient (ob/ob) obese mice. Both mice strains developed obesity, but the obesity was inhibited by the reduced food intake resulting from rutecarpine treatment (0.01%, < 0.01). Blood cholesterol, non-fasting glucose, insulin, and leptin levels were reduced, compared with the control group. Rutecarpine inhibited the expression of NPY and AgRP in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) of the hypothalamus and suppressed the expression of both neuropeptides in N29-4 neuronal cells. These results indicate that rutecarpine ameliorates obesity by inhibiting food intake, which involves inhibited expression of the orexigenic neuropeptides NPY and AgRP.  相似文献   

12.
Naltrexone (NLTX) in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) decreases feeding induced by neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN). We sought to determine the NTS region most sensitive to NLTX blockade of PVN NPY-induced feeding. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were fitted with two cannulas; one in the PVN and one in a hindbrain region: caudal, medial, or rostral NTS or 1 mm outside the NTS. Animals received NLTX (0, 1, 3, 10, and 30 microg in 0.3 microl) into the hindbrain region just prior to PVN NPY (0.5 microg, 0.3 microl) or artificial cerebrospinal fluid (0.3 microl). Food intake was measured at 2 h following injection. PVN NPY stimulated feeding, and NLTX in the medial NTS significantly decreased NPY-induced feeding at 2 h, whereas administration of NLTX in the other hindbrain regions did not significantly influence PVN NPY induced feeding. These data suggest that opioid receptors in the medial NTS are most responsive to feeding signals originating in the PVN after NPY stimulation.  相似文献   

13.
The brain-gut peptide cholecystokinin (CCK) inhibits food intake following peripheral or site directed central administration. Peripheral exogenous CCK inhibits food intake by reducing the size and duration of a meal. Antagonist studies have demonstrated that the actions of the exogenous peptide mimic those of endogenous CCK. Antagonist administration results in increased meal size and meal duration. The feeding inhibitory actions of CCK are mediated through interactions with CCK-1 receptors. The recent identification of the Otsuka-Long-Evans-Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rat as a spontaneous CCK-1 receptor knockout model has allowed a more comprehensive evaluation of the feeding actions of CCK. OLETF rats become obese and develop non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Consistent with the absence of CCK-1 receptors, OLETF rats do not respond to exogenous CCK. OLETF rats are hyperphagic and their increased food intake is characterized by a large increase in meal size with a decrease in meal frequency that is not sufficient to compensate for the meal size increase. Deficits in meal size control are evident in OLETF rats as young as 2 days of age. OLETF obesity is secondary to the increased food intake. Pair feeding to amounts consumed by intact control rats normalizes body weight, body fat and elevated insulin and glucose levels. Hypothalamic arcuate nucleus peptide mRNA expression in OLETF rats is appropriate to their obesity and is normalized by pair feeding. In contrast, pair fed and young pre-obese OLETF rats have greatly elevated dorsomedial hypothalamic (DMH) neuropeptide Y (NPY) mRNA expression. Elevated DMH NPY in OLETF rats appears to be a consequence of the absence of CCK-1 receptors. In intact rats NPY and CCK-1 receptors colocalize to neurons within the compact subregion of the DMH and local CCK administration reduces food intake and decreases DMH NPY mRNA expression. We have proposed that the absence of DMH CCK-1 receptors significantly contributes to the OLETF's inability to compensate for their meal size control deficit leading to their overall hyperphagia. Access to a running wheel and the resulting exercise normalizes food intake and body weight in OLETF rats. When given access to running wheels for 6 weeks shortly after weaning, OLETF rats do not gain weight to the same degree as sedentary OLETF rats and do not develop NIDDM. Exercise also prevents elevated levels of DMH NPY mRNA expression, suggesting that exercise exerts an alternative, non-CCK mediated, control on DMH NPY. The OLETF rat is a valuable model for characterizing actions of CCK in energy balance and has provided novel insights into interactions between exercise and food intake.  相似文献   

14.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) produced in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) of the hypothalamus stimulates feeding both directly by activating NPY receptors and indirectly through release of the orexigenic peptides, galanin and beta-endorphin (beta-END), in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and surrounding neural sites. Orexin A and orexin B, produced outside the ARC in the lateral hypothalamic area (LH), have recently been shown to stimulate feeding. In the present studies we tested the hypothesis that NPYergic signaling may mediate feeding stimulated by orexins. In adult male rats injected intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) with orexin A (3, 10, 15 nmol) or orexin B (3, 10, 30 nmol) feeding was stimulated in a dose-dependent manner; maximal feeding was seen after 15 nmol orexin A and 30 nmol orexin B. To determine whether NPY may mediate this orexin stimulated feeding, we used 1229U91, a selective NPY Y1 receptor antagonist (NPY-A). Whereas NPY-A on its own was ineffective, it suppressed NPY-induced feeding. Furthermore, NPY-A completely blocked the feeding evoked by either orexin A (15 nmol) or orexin B (30 nmol). These results show that orexin A and B stimulate feeding and further suggest that these excitatory effects may be mediated by NPYergic signaling through Y1 receptors. These findings are in accord with the view that the orexin-NPY pathway may comprise a functional link upstream from NPY within the hypothalamic appetite regulating network.  相似文献   

15.
目的:探究YY肽(PYY)对雄性Wistar大鼠的摄食、胃运动和能量代谢的影响及潜在机制。方法:采用免疫组织化学实验方法观察大鼠下丘脑弓状核(ARC)中Y2受体的表达;通过ARC微量注射PYY,观察其对下丘脑中编码摄食相关代谢激素的m RNA表达以及ARC中PYY反应性神经元的放电频率、食物摄入量及水摄入量、氧气消耗(VO_2)、CO_2产生(VCO_2)及能量代谢的影响。结果:免疫组化结果显示大鼠ARC内存在Y2受体;大鼠ARC注射PYY能够兴奋PYY反应性神经元,上调可卡因-苯丙胺调节转录肽(CART)及促肾上腺皮质释放激素(CRH)等抑食肽m RNA的表达,下调神经肽Y(NPY)及下丘脑泌素(HCRT)等促食肽m RNA的表达;且抑制大鼠食物摄入量,并参与调控大鼠呼吸、能量代谢及胃运动的改变。结论:ARC微量注射PYY可减少食物摄入并调节全身能量平衡,PYY可能是一种新型代谢肽。  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) neuronal projections from the arcuate nucleus (ARC) have been proposed to target corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)-positive neurons in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) as part of the ARC-PVN axis. The existence of a positive feedback loop involving CRF receptors in the PVN has been suggested. Exogenous NPY and CRF in the PVN have been shown to inhibit gastric acid secretion. Recently, we have demonstrated that activation of ARC neurons inhibits gastric acid secretion via vagal pathways. To what extent NPY- and CRF-mediated mechanisms in the PVN contribute to the CNS modulation of gastric acid secretion is still an open question. In the present study, we performed consecutive bilateral microinjections of antagonists to NPY receptor subtypes Y1 and Y2 and to CRF1/2 receptors in the PVN and of the excitatory amino acid kainate in the ARC to assess the role of NPY- and CRF-mediated mechanisms in the kainate-induced effects on gastric acid secretion. Gastric acid secretion was measured at the basal condition and during pentagastrin (16 microg/kg body wt) stimulation. Microinjection of vehicle in the PVN and kainate in the ARC decreased gastric acid secretion. Microinjection of the specific NPY-Y1 receptor antagonist BIBP-3226 (200 pmol) and the nonspecific CRF1/2 antagonist astressin (30 pmol) in the PVN abolished the inhibitory effect of neuronal activation in the ARC by kainate on gastric acid secretion. The CRF antagonist astressin was more effective. Pretreatment with the NPY-Y2 receptor antagonist BIIE-0246 (120 pmol) in the PVN had no significant effect. Our results indicate that activation of neurons in the ARC inhibits gastric acid secretion via CRF1/2 and NPY-Y1 receptor-mediated pathways in the PVN.  相似文献   

18.
Neuropeptide Y strongly stimulates food intake when it is injected in the hypothalamic paraventricular (PVN) and ventromedian (VMN) nuclei. In Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, NPY synthesis in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) is increased by food deprivation and is normalized by refeeding. We have previously shown that the obese hyperphagic Zucker rat is characterized by higher NPY concentrations in this nucleus. NPY might therefore play an important role in the development of hyperphagia. The aim of the present study was to determine if the regulation by the feeding state works in the obese Zucker rat. For this purpose, 10 weeks-old male lean (n = 30) and obese (n = 30) Zucker rats were either fed ad libitum, either food-deprived (FD) for 48 hours or food-deprived for 48 h and refed (RF) for 6 hours. NPY was measured in several microdissected brain areas involved in the regulation of feeding behavior. NPY concentrations in the ARC was about 50% greater in obese rats than in lean rats (p less than 0.02) whatever the feeding state. In the VMN, NPY concentrations were higher in the lean FD rats than in the obese FD rat (p less than 0.001). Food deprivation or refeeding did not modify NPY in the ARC, in the VMN or in the dorsomedian nucleus whatever the genotype considered. On the other hand, food deprivation induced a significant decrease in NPY concentrations in the PVN of lean rats. This decrease was localized in the parvocellular part of this nucleus (43.0 +/- 1.9 (FD) vs 54.2 +/- 2.1 (Ad lib) ng/mg protein; p less than 0.005). Ad lib levels were restored by 6 hours of refeeding. These variations were not observed in the obese rat. The regulation of NPY by the feeding state in the Zucker rat was therefore very different from that described in the SD rats. Strain or age of the animals used might explain these differences. High NPY levels and absence of regulation in obese Zucker rats could contribute to the abnormal feeding behavior of these rats.  相似文献   

19.
Broiler chicks eat more food than layer chicks. In this study, we examined the involvement of orexigenic peptide neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the difference in food intake between broiler and layer chicks (Gallus gallus). First, we compared the hypothalamic mRNA levels of NPY and its receptors (Y1 and Y5 receptors) between these strains at 1, 2, 4, and 8 days of age. Daily food intake was significantly higher in broiler chicks than layer chicks after 2 days of age. However, the hypothalamic NPY mRNA level was significantly lower in broiler chicks than layer chicks except at 8 days of age. In addition, the mRNA levels of NPY receptors were also significantly lower in broiler chicks than layer chicks at 2 and 4 days of age (Y1 receptor) or 2 days of age (Y5 receptor). These results suggest that the differences in the expressions of hypothalamic NPY and its receptors do not cause the increase in food intake in broiler chicks. To compare the orexigenic effect of NPY between broiler and layer chicks, we next examined the effects of central administration of NPY on food intake in these strains. In both strains, central administration of NPY significantly increased food intake at 2, 4 and 8 days of age. All our findings demonstrated that the increase in food intake in broiler chicks is not accompanied with the over-expression of NPY or its receptor.  相似文献   

20.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) injected into the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) stimulates feeding and decreases uncoupling protein (UCP)-1 mRNA in brown adipose tissue (BAT). The present studies were undertaken to determine whether UCP-2 in white adipose tissue (WAT) and UCP-3 in muscle are regulated by NPY in the PVN. PVN-cannulated male Sprague-Dawley rats were injected with either saline or NPY (PVN, 117 pmol, 0.5 microl) every 6 h for 24 h. NPY in the PVN stimulated feeding and decreased UCP-1 mRNA in BAT independent of NPY-induced feeding. UCP-2 mRNA in WAT was unchanged by NPY. In acromiotrapezius muscle, NPY decreased UCP-3 mRNA, but this was reversed by restricting food intake to control levels. In biceps femoris muscle, NPY alone had no effect on UCP-3 mRNA, but UCP-3 mRNA was significantly increased in the NPY-treated rats that were restricted to control levels of intake. These results suggest that UCP-2 in WAT and UCP-3 in muscle are not subject to specific regulation by NPY in the PVN.  相似文献   

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