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1.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY), a 36-amino-acid peptide widely expressed in the brain is involved in many physiological responses, including hypothalamic control of food intake and cardiovascular homeostasis. NPY mediates its effects through binding to the Y1, Y2 and Y5 G-protein-coupled receptors. Little is known of the role of the Y2 receptor in mediating the different NPY effects. We inactivated the Y2 receptor subtype in mice and found that these mice developed increased body weight, food intake and fat deposition. The null mutant mice showed an attenuated response to leptin administration but a normal response to NPY-induced food intake and intact regulation of re-feeding and body weight after starvation. An absence of the Y2 receptor subtype also affected the basal control of heart rate, but did not influence blood pressure. These findings indicate an inhibitory role for the Y2 receptor subtype in the central regulation of body weight and control of food intake.  相似文献   

2.
To date, many technologies have been developed to increase efficiency in aquaculture, but very few successful biotechnology molecules have arrived on the market. In this context, marine biotechnology has an opportunity to develop products to improve the output of fish in aquaculture. Published in vivo studies on the action of the pituitary adenylate cyclase‐activating polypeptide (PACAP) in fish are scarce. Recently, our group, for the first time, demonstrated the biological role of this neuropeptide administrated by immersion baths in the growth and development of larval fish. In this work, we have evaluated the effects of recombinant Clarias gariepinus PACAP administration by intraperitoneal injection on growth performance and feeding behavior in juvenile fish. Our results showed the physiological role of this peptide for growth control in fish, including the juvenile stage, and confirm that its biological functions are well conserved in fish, since C. gariepinus PACAP stimulated growth in juvenile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus. In addition, we have observed that the growth‐promoting effect of PACAP in juvenile tilapia was correlated with higher GH concentration in serum. With regard to the neuroendocrine regulation of growth control by PACAP, it was demonstrated that PACAP stimulates food intake in juvenile tilapia. In general, PACAP appears to act in the regulation of the growth control in juvenile fish. These findings propose that PACAP is a prominent target with the potential to stimulate fish growth in aquaculture. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a 36 amino acid peptide released in central and peripheral mammalian neurons, which appears to contribute to adiposity regulation by increasing food intake, thus promoting weight gain on animals. Nevertheless, little is known about NPY direct actions on white adipocytes. This trial, which was designed to test the possible effects of a new NPY antagonist, S.A.0204, on white adipose tissue, revealed that the administration of this novel molecule strongly ex vivo stimulates apoptosis and lipolysis in animals fed on a high-fat diet.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Tian N  Wang F  Tian DR  Zou Y  Wang SW  Guan LL  Shi YS  Chang JK  Yang J  Han JS 《Peptides》2006,27(9):2313-2320
Electroacupuncture (EA) has been reported to reduce body weight in overweight subjects in clinical practice, as well as in rats and mice with diet-induced obesity. In the present study, this effect of EA was tested in lean rats subjected to long-term food restriction (FR, food was offered only 1 h/day). Two hertz EA administered once every other day produced a further reduction in body weight in FR rats. Exploration of the mechanism involved revealed significant downregulation of the orexigenic peptides: ghrelin in the stomach, and neuropeptide Y (NPY) but not Agouti-related peptide (AgRP) in the hypothalamus, which was in line with the reduction in food intake in rats receiving EA stimulation as compared with those receiving restraint only. Uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3), involved in accelerating energy expenditure, was not significantly altered. These results suggest that the EA-induced body weight reduction was due mainly to a decrease in food intake rather than an increase in energy expenditure. A reduction in the orexigenic peptides ghrelin and NPY may be involved in the underlying mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Aldegunde M  Mancebo M 《Peptides》2006,27(4):719-727
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is one of the most potent stimulants of food intake in mammals, but very little is known about NPY actions in fish. The present study investigated the role of NPY in food intake in the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Food intake was monitored at different times after intracerebroventricular administration of porcine NPY (4 or 8 microg). Both doses significantly increased food intake at 2 and 3 h, and this effect was dose-dependent. However, 50 h after administration of NPY, food intake was significantly lower than in control fish, and cumulative food intake had returned to levels similar to those seen in the control group. The NPY antagonist (D-Tyr27,36, D-Thr32)-NPY (10 microg) inhibited food intake 2 h after icv administration, but did not block the orexigenic effect of NPY when administered jointly with 4 microg NPY. To identify the NPY receptor subtypes involved in the effects of NPY on food intake, we studied the effects of the Y1 receptor agonist (Leu31, Pro34)-NPY (4 microg), the Y2 receptor agonist NPY(3-36) (4 microg), and the highly specific Y5 receptor agonist (cPP(1-7), NPY19-23, Ala31, Aib32, Gln34)-hPP (4 microg). Short-term (2 h) food intake was moderately stimulated by the Y1 agonist, more strongly stimulated by the Y2 agonist, and unaffected by the Y5 agonist. We found that administration of NPY (8 microg icv) had no effect on aminergic systems in several brain regions 2 and 50 h after NPY administration. These results indicate that NPY stimulates feeding in the rainbow trout, and suggest that this effect is cooperatively mediated by Y2- and Y1-like NPY receptors, not by Y5-like receptors.  相似文献   

8.
Peripheral administration of the endogenous Y(2) and Y(4) receptor selective agonists, PYY(3-36) and PP, have been shown to inhibit food intake and body weight gain in rodents, and to reduce appetite and caloric intake in humans. We have previously developed a long-acting, potent and highly selective Y(2) receptor selective agonist, N-alpha-Ac-[Nle(24,28), Trp(30), Nva(31), Psi(35-36)]PYY(22-36)-NH(2) (BT-48). BT-48 (ip) dose-dependently inhibited ad lib food intake and also decreased the respiratory quotient in mice during both the light and dark periods. The latter observation is indicative of enhanced fat metabolism. Moreover, BT-48 also inhibited food intake in fasted mice. Combined ip administration of BT-48 (50nmol/mouse) with a highly potent and selective Y(4) anorectic peptide, BVD-74D (50nmol/mouse), resulted in a powerful and long lasting inhibitory effect on food intake. As expected, this inhibitory effect on food intake was nearly double that exhibited by either peptide (50nmol/mouse) alone. In summary, BT-48, unlike PYY(3-36), exhibits little or no affinity to other "Y" receptors, and may therefore have a better clinical potential than PYY(3-36) for control of food intake. Moreover, it appears that treatment with a combination of Y(2) and Y(4) receptor selective agonists may constitute a more powerful approach to control food intake than treatment with either of these agonists alone.  相似文献   

9.
The capacity of hybrid tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus × O. niloticus [23.2 ± 0.2 g (mean ± SE)] to show compensatory growth was assessed in an 8‐week experiment. Fish were deprived of feed for 1, 2 and 4 weeks, and then fed to satiation for 4 weeks; fish fed to satiation during the experiment served as control. Water temperature gradually declined from 28.1 to 25.5°C throughout the experiment. Specific growth rate (SGR) decreased with progressive food deprivation. At the end of deprivation, body weight was lower in the deprived fish than in the control. Fish deprived for 4 weeks exhibited lower contents of lipids and energy in whole body, and higher moisture content and ratio of protein to energy (P/E) than those of the control; they also consumed feed faster than the control when normal feeding was resumed. All deprived fish showed higher food intake (FI) than that of the control during re‐alimentation; however, enhanced SGR was only observed in the fish deprived for 4 weeks. There were no significant differences in digestibility of protein and energy, food efficiency (FE) or energy retention efficiency between the control and deprived fish. At the end of re‐alimentation, deprived fish failed to catch up in body weight with the control, while content of moisture, lipids and energy, and P/E in whole body of the deprived fish did not significantly differ from that of the control. The results of the experiment revealed that the hybrid tilapia reared in freshwater showed partial capacity for compensatory growth following food deprivation of 4 weeks, and that growth compensation was due mainly to increased FI, rather than to improved FE.  相似文献   

10.
It has been suggested that an opioidergic feeding pathway exists between the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) and the central nucleus of the amygdala. We studied the following three groups of rats: 1) artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) infused in the NTS, 2) naltrexone (100 microg/day) infused for 13 days in the NTS, and 3) artificial CSF infused in the NTS of rats pair fed to the naltrexone-infused group. Naltrexone administration resulted in a decrease in body weight and food intake. Also, naltrexone infusion increased dynorphin, but not enkephalin, gene expression in the amygdala, independent of the naltrexone-induced reduction in food intake. Gene expression of neuropeptide Y in the arcuate nucleus and neuropeptide Y peptide levels in the paraventricular nucleus did not change because of naltrexone infusion. However, naltrexone induced an increase in serum leptin compared with pair-fed controls. Thus chronic administration of naltrexone in the NTS increased dynorphin gene expression in the amygdala, further supporting an opioidergic feeding pathway between these two brain sites.  相似文献   

11.
Neuropeptide Y has been proposed to play a major role in the hypothalamic regulation of feeding behavior through the activation of specific, central NPY receptor(s). In an effort to design small molecule antagonists of NPY receptors, we have synthesized a series of substituted dipeptides based on defined pharmacophores, previously identified by us and others as essential for the interaction with the peptide receptors. GI264879A behaves as a functional antagonist of Y1 receptors while displaying no binding selectivity for the different NPY receptor subtypes. We demonstrate here that administration of GI264879A to rats causes a significant decrease in food intake and body weight partly through a mechanism dependent on the integrity of the vagus nerve.  相似文献   

12.
Does neuropeptide Y contribute to the anorectic action of amylin?   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Morris MJ  Nguyen T 《Peptides》2001,22(3):541-546
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a potent feeding stimulant acting at the level of the hypothalamus. Amylin, a peptide co-released with insulin from pancreatic beta cells, inhibits feeding following peripheral or central administration. However, the mechanism by which amylin exerts its anorectic effect is controversial. This study investigated the acute effect of amylin on food intake induced by NPY, and the effect of chronic amylin administration on food intake and body weight in male Sprague Dawley rats previously implanted with intracerebroventricular (icv) cannulae. Rats received 1 nmol NPY, followed by amylin (0.05, 0.1, 0.5 nmol) or 2 microl saline. Increasing doses of amylin resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of NPY-induced feeding by 31%, 74% and 99%, respectively (P < 0.05). To determine the chronic effects of i.c.v. amylin administration on feeding, rats received 0.5 nmol amylin or saline daily, 30 min before dark phase, over 6 days. Amylin significantly reduced food intake at 1, 4, 16 and 24 hours; after 6 days, amylin-treated rats showed a significant reduction in body weight, having lost 17.3 +/- 6.1 g, while control animals gained 7.7 +/- 5.1 g (P < 0.05). Brain NPY concentrations were not elevated, despite the reduced food intake, suggesting amylin may regulate NPY production or release. Thus, amylin potently inhibits NPY-induced feeding and attenuates normal 24 hour food intake, leading to weight loss.  相似文献   

13.
14.
A.S. Levine  J.E. Morley   《Peptides》1984,5(6):1025-1029
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a 36 amino acid peptide with potent cardiovascular effects. In the present study, intraventricular injection of NPY was shown to markedly stimulate feeding and drinking during the illuminated period of the light/dark cycle, a time when rats ingest small amounts of food. It also enhanced nocturnal food and water intake following a 24 hour period of food deprivation and during nocturnal feeding. The NPY induction of food intake was suppressed by the opiate antagonist, naloxone, and by the dopamine antagonist, haloperidol. Phentolamine, an alpha adrenergic antagonist, failed to suppress NPY-induced feeding. Based on the maximum quantity of food which was ingested following central administration of NPY, this peptide appears to represent one of the most potent stimulators of feeding yet to be described.  相似文献   

15.
I G Joshua 《Peptides》1991,12(1):37-41
The in vivo responsiveness of small arterioles and venules in the rat cremaster muscle to topical administration of neuropeptide Y was assessed using closed-circuit television microscopy. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg) and the cremaster muscle was exposed to increasing bath concentrations of neuropeptide Y (10(-10)-10(-7) M). Neuropeptide Y produced dose-dependent constrictions in first (90 +/- 8 microns), second (50 +/- 6 microns) and third (21 +/- 4 microns) order arterioles. Arteriolar reactivity to the peptide was inversely related to vessel diameters. Venules were relatively unresponsive to neuropeptide Y. Exposure to the alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonist, phentolamine (10(-6) M), failed to modify the arteriolar constrictor responses to neuropeptide Y, while pretreatment with the sympathetic neuronal blocking agent, guanethidine (10(-5) M), produced a small, but significant, reduction in sensitivity. These data suggest that neuropeptide Y causes constriction of arterioles of skeletal muscle, primarily by acting directly on vascular smooth muscle to induce contraction, and not via release of endogenous norepinephrine.  相似文献   

16.
Neuropeptide Y is an important regulator of energy intake and expenditure. The central portion of this regulatory system appears to reside in the arcuate nucleus/paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus. The effects of neuropeptide Y on energy metabolism include increased food intake, decreased thermogenesis and increased white fat storage.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Significant weight loss following Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB) in obese humans correlates with enhanced secretion of anorexigenic gut hormones glucagon‐like peptide‐1 (GLP‐1) and peptide YY3–36 (PYY3–36). Our aim here was to identify a dosing strategy for intraperitoneal (IP) infusion of GLP‐1 homologue exendin‐4 alone and with PYY3–36 that produces a sustained reduction in daily food intake and body weight in diet‐induced obese (DIO) rats. We tested 12 exendin‐4 strategies over 10 weeks. Exendin‐4 infused during the first and last 3 h of the dark period at 15–20 pmol/h (0.15 nmol/kg/day) produced a sustained 24 ± 1% reduction in daily food intake for 17 days, and decreased body weight by 7%. In a separate group of DIO rats, none of seven dosing strategies combining exendin‐4 and PYY3–36 produced a similar reduction in daily food intake for >10 days. The subsequent decline in efficacies of exendin‐4 alone and with PYY3–36 on food intake and body weight in each experiment suggested possible receptor downregulation and tolerance to treatments. However, when treatments were discontinued for 1 day following losses in efficacies, daily food intake significantly increased. Together, these results demonstrate that (i) intermittent IP infusion of a low dose of exendin‐4 can produce a relatively prolonged reduction in daily food intake and body weight in DIO rats, (ii) co‐infusion of exendin‐4 and PYY3–36 does not further prolong this response, and (iii) activation of an orexigenic mechanism gradually occurs to counteract the inhibitory effects of exendin‐4 alone and with PYY3–36 on food intake and body weight.  相似文献   

19.
Running wheel access and resulting voluntary exercise alter food intake and reduce body weight. The neural mechanisms underlying these effects are unclear. In this study, we first assessed the effects of 7 days of running wheel access on food intake, body weight, and hypothalamic gene expression. We demonstrate that running wheel access significantly decreases food intake and body weight and results in a significant elevation of CRF mRNA expression in the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) but not the paraventricular nucleus. Seven-day running wheel access also results in elevated arcuate nucleus and DMH neuropeptide Y gene expression. To assess a potential role for elevated DMH CRF activity in the activity-induced changes in food intake and body weight, we compared changes in food intake, body weight, and hypothalamic gene expression in rats receiving intracerebroventricular (ICV) CRF antagonist alpha-helical CRF or vehicle with or without access to running wheels. During a 4-day period of running wheel access, we found that exercise-induced reductions of food intake and body weight were significantly attenuated by ICV injection of the CRF antagonist. The effect on food intake was specific to a blockade of activity-induced changes in meal size. Central CRF antagonist injection further increased DMH CRF mRNA expression in exercised rats. Together, these data suggest that DMH CRF play a critical role in the anorexia resulting from increased voluntary exercise.  相似文献   

20.
A major paradigm in the field of obesity research is the existence of an adipose tissue-brain endocrine axis for the regulation of body weight. Leptin, the peptide mediator of this axis, is secreted by adipose cells. It lowers food intake and body weight by acting in the hypothalamus, a region expressing an abundance of leptin receptors and a variety of neuropeptides that influence food intake and energy balance. Among the most promising candidates for leptin-sensitive cells in the hypothalamus are arcuate nucleus neurons that co-express the anabolic neuropeptides, neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related peptide (AGRP), and those that express proopiomelanocortin (POMC), the precursor of the catabolic peptide, alphaMSH. These cell types contain mRNA encoding leptin receptors and show changes in neuropeptide gene expression in response to changes in food intake and circulating leptin levels. Decreased leptin signaling in the arcuate nucleus is hypothesized to increase the expression of NPY and AGRP. Levels of leptin receptor mRNA and leptin binding are increased in the arcuate nucleus during fasting, principally in NPY/AGRP neurons. These findings suggest that changes in leptin receptor expression in the arcuate nucleus are inversely associated with changes in leptin signaling, and that the arcuate nucleus is an important target of leptin action in the brain.  相似文献   

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