首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The reduced metabolism derived from daily torpor enables numerous small mammals, including Siberian hamsters, to survive periods of energetic challenge. Little is known of the neural mechanisms underlying the initiation and expression of torpor. Hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) contributes to surviving energetic challenges by both increasing food ingestion and reducing metabolic expenditure. Intracerebroventricular injections of NPY in cold-acclimated Siberian hamsters induce torpor-like hypothermia comparable to natural torpor. Multiple NPY receptor subtypes have been identified, and the Y1 receptor and Y5 receptor both contribute to the orexigenic effect of NPY. The purpose of this research was to compare and contrast the effects of Y1 receptor activation by a specific Y1 agonist ([D-Arg25]-NPY) or Y5 receptor activation by a specific Y5 agonist ([D-Trp34]-NPY) on body temperature and subsequent food intake in cold-acclimated Siberian hamsters. Intracerebroventricular injections of Y1 agonist produced torporlike hypothermia closely resembling that induced by intracerebroventricular NPY. The intracerebroventricular Y5 agonist infrequently produced hypothermia reaching criterion for torpor and that failed to resemble either NPY-induced or natural torpor. Combined injections of Y1 and Y5 agonists resulted in hypothermia comparable to Y5 agonist treatments alone, negating the mimicry of NPY treatment seen with Y1 agonist alone. Prior treatment with Y1 agonist or Y5 agonist surprisingly had lingering effects on NPY-induced torpor expression, Y1 agonist enhanced and Y5 agonist inhibited the effect of NPY. The ability of NPY to induce torporlike hypothermia, especially its initiation, most likely involves activation of the NPY Y1 receptor subtype.  相似文献   

2.
Fasting triggers a constellation of physiological and behavioral changes, including increases in peripherally produced ghrelin and centrally produced hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY). Refeeding stimulates food intake in most species; however, hamsters primarily increase foraging and food hoarding with smaller increases in food intake. Fasting-induced increases in foraging and food hoarding in Siberian hamsters are mimicked by peripheral ghrelin, central NPY, and NPY Y1 receptor agonist injections. Because fasting stimulates ghrelin and subsequently NPY synthesis/release, it may be that fasting-induced increased hoarding is mediated by NPY Y1 receptor activation. Therefore, we asked: Can an Y1 receptor antagonist block fasting- or ghrelin-induced increases in foraging, food hoarding, and food intake? This was accomplished by injecting the NPY Y1 receptor antagonist 1229U91 intracerebroventricularly in hamsters fasted, fed, or given peripheral ghrelin injections and housed in a running wheel-based food delivery foraging system coupled with simulated-burrow housing. Three foraging conditions were used: 1) no running wheel access, free food, 2) running wheel access, free food, or 3) foraging requirement (10 revolutions/pellet) for food. Fasting was a more potent stimulator of foraging and food hoarding than ghrelin. Concurrent injections of 1229U91 completely blocked fasting- and ghrelin-induced increased foraging and food intake and attenuated, but did not always completely block, fasting- and ghrelin-induced increases in food hoarding. Collectively, these data suggest that the NPY Y1 receptor is important for the effects of ghrelin- and fasting-induced increases in foraging and food intake, but other NPY receptors and/or other neurochemical systems are involved in increases in food hoarding.  相似文献   

3.
Fasting has widespread physiological and behavioral effects such as increases in arcuate nucleus neuropeptide Y (NPY) gene expression in rodents, including Siberian hamsters. Fasting also stimulates foraging and food hoarding (appetitive ingestive behaviors) by Siberian hamsters but does relatively little to change food intake (consummatory ingestive behavior). Therefore, we tested the effects of third ventricular NPY Y1 ([Pro(34)]NPY) or Y5 ([D-Trp(34)]NPY) receptor agonists on these ingestive behaviors using a wheel running-based food delivery system coupled with simulated burrow housing. Siberian hamsters had 1) no running wheel access and free food, 2) running wheel access and free food, or 3) foraging requirements (10 or 50 revolutions/pellet). NPY (1.76 nmol) stimulated food intake only during the first 4 h postinjection ( approximately 200-1,000%) and mostly in hamsters with a foraging requirement. The Y1 receptor agonist markedly increased food hoarding (250-1,000%), increased foraging as well as wheel running per se, and had relatively little effect on food intake (<250%). Unlike NPY, the Y5 agonist significantly increased food intake, especially in foraging animals ( approximately 225-800%), marginally increased food hoarding (250-500%), and stimulated foraging and wheel running 4-24 h postinjection, with the distribution of earned pellets favoring eating versus hoarding across time. Across treatments, food hoarding predominated early postinjection, whereas food intake tended to do so later. Collectively, NPY stimulated both appetitive and consummatory ingestive behaviors in Siberian hamsters involving Y1/Y5 receptors, with food hoarding and foraging/wheel running (appetitive) more involved with Y1 receptors and food intake (consummatory) with Y5 receptors.  相似文献   

4.
Siberian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus) have the ability to express daily torpor and decrease their body temperature to approximately 15 degrees C, providing a significant savings in energy expenditure. Daily torpor in hamsters is cued by winterlike photoperiods and occurs coincident with the annual nadirs in body fat reserves and chronic leptin concentrations. To better understand the neural mechanisms underlying torpor, Siberian hamster pups were postnatally treated with saline or MSG to ablate arcuate nucleus neurons that likely possess leptin receptors. Body temperature was studied telemetrically in cold-acclimated (10 degrees C) male and female hamsters moved to a winterlike photoperiod (10:14-h light-dark cycle) (experiments 1 and 2) or that remained in a summerlike photoperiod (14:10-h light-dark cycle) (experiment 3). In experiment 1, even though other photoperiodic responses persisted, MSG-induced arcuate nucleus ablations prevented the photoperiod-dependent torpor observed in saline-treated Siberian hamsters. MSG-treated hamsters tended to possess greater fat reserves. To determine whether reductions in body fat would increase frequency of photoperiod-induced torpor after MSG treatment, hamsters underwent 2 wk of food restriction (70% of ad libitum) in experiment 2. Although food restriction did increase the frequency of torpor in both MSG- and saline-treated hamsters, it failed to normalize the proportion of MSG-treated hamsters undergoing photoperiod-dependent torpor. In experiment 3, postnatal MSG treatments reduced the proportion of hamsters entering 2DG-induced torpor-like hypothermia by approximately 50% compared with saline-treated hamsters (38 vs. 72%). In those MSG-treated hamsters that did become hypothermic, their minimum temperature during hypothermia was significantly greater than comparable saline-treated hamsters. We conclude that 1) arcuate nucleus mechanisms mediate photoperiod-induced torpor, 2) food-restriction-induced torpor may also be reduced by MSG treatments, and 3) arcuate nucleus neurons make an important, albeit partial, contribution to 2DG-induced torpor-like hypothermia.  相似文献   

5.
Cardiovascular and respiratory effects of intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of neuropeptide Y (NPY) and separate, preferential agonists for NPY Y1 and Y2 receptors were observed in anaesthetised dogs. Central injections of NPY resulted in significant cardiac slowing and decreases in arterial pressure. These cardiovascular effects were blocked by central injection of the NPY Y1- preferring antagonist 1229U91. Central injection of NPY did not have a significant effect on ventilation, but the NPY Y1 antagonist 1229U91 administered alone caused a significant increase in ventilation. The NPY Y1-receptor agonist [Leu31Pro34] NPY significantly decreased ventilation while the NPY Y2 receptor agonist N-acetyl [Leu28Leu31] NPY 24--36 significantly increased it. A similar inverse relationship was seen with respect to blood pressure, with the NPY Y1-receptor agonist [Leu31Pro34] NPY significantly decreasing blood pressure, while the NPY Y2 receptor agonist N-acetyl [Leu28Leu31] NPY 24-36 significantly increased it. These findings suggest a role for NPY Y1 receptors in pathways mediating decreases in ventilation and blood pressure, and for NPY Y2 receptors in those mediating increased ventilation and blood pressure.  相似文献   

6.
Previously, in vivo studies showed that neuropeptide Y (NPY) elevates vascular permeability in isolated lung perfusion preparations, possibly through binding to the NPY Y(3) receptor. The present study used monolayers in a double-chamber culture method under conditions of normoxia (5% CO(2)-20% O(2)-75% N(2)) or hypoxia (5% CO(2)-5% O(2)-90% N(2)) to test the hypothesis that NPY directly affects rat aortic endothelial cells (RAECs). RAECs were cultured on the base of the upper chamber, into which FITC-labeled albumin was introduced, and permeation into the lower chamber was measured. The RAEC monolayer was treated with 10(-8)-3 x 10(-7) M NPY for 2 h in normoxia or hypoxia. In hypoxia, NPY concentration dependently increased the permeability of the RAEC monolayer, whereas in normoxia no significant change was observed. Peptide YY, NPY Y(1), and NPY Y(2) receptor agonists and NPY Y(1) receptor antagonist exerted no significant effects under hypoxic conditions. NPY-(18-36), an NPY Y(3) receptor antagonist, elicited an inhibitory action on the NPY-induced increase in monolayer permeability. Furthermore, neither N-monomethyl-l-arginine, a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, the bradykinin B(2) receptor antagonist FK-3657, nor the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-coupled tyrosine kinase inhibitor tyrphostin SU-1498, injected into the medium of the upper chamber, affected the NPY-induced permeability changes under hypoxic conditions. The results suggest that the NPY-induced increase in permeability across the RAEC monolayer is closely related to low O(2) tension, possibly mediated by direct action on the NPY Y(3) receptor expressed on the endothelial cell membrane. Furthermore, this NPY-induced increase is not likely due to nitric oxide, bradykinin, or vascular endothelial growth factor.  相似文献   

7.
Effects of neuropeptide Y (NPY) on motility of the proximal stomach was examined in anesthetized rats. Intragastric pressure was measured using a balloon situated in the proximal part of the stomach. Administration of NPY into the fourth ventricle induced relaxation of the proximal stomach in a dose-dependent manner. Administration of an Y1 receptor (Y1R) agonist [Leu31, Pro34]NPY induced a larger relaxation than NPY. The administration of an Y2 receptor agonist (NPY 13-36) did not induce significant changes in motility. Microinjections of [Leu31, Pro34]NPY into the caudal part of the dorsal vagal complex (DVC) induced relaxation of the proximal stomach. In contrast, similar injections into the intermediate part of the DVC increased IGP of the proximal stomach. Administration of NPY into the fourth ventricle did not induce relaxation after bilateral injections of the Y1R antagonist (1229U91) into the caudal DVC. These results indicate that NPY induces relaxation in the proximal stomach via Y1Rs situated in the DVC. Because bilateral vagotomy below the diaphragm abolished the relaxation induced by the administration of NPY into the fourth ventricle, relaxation induced by NPY is probably mediated by vagal preganglionic neurons. Intravenous injection of atropine methyl nitrate reduced relaxation induced by administration of NPY. Therefore, relaxation induced by NPY is likely mediated by peripheral cholinergic neurons.  相似文献   

8.
A photoperiod with a short photophase induces a winterlike phenotype in Siberian hamsters that includes a progressive decrease in food intake and body mass and reproductive organ regression, as well as reversible hypothermia in the form of short-duration torpor. Torpor substantially reduces energy utilization and is not initiated until body mass, fat stores, and serum leptin concentrations are at their nadir. Because photoperiod-dependent torpor is delayed until fat reserves are lowest, leptin concentrations may be a permissive factor for torpor onset. This conjecture was tested by implanting osmotic minipumps into Siberian hamsters manifesting spontaneous torpor; the animals received a constant release of leptin or vehicle for 14 days. Exogenous leptin treatment eliminated torpor in a significant proportion of treated hamsters, whereas treatment with the vehicle did not. Similarly, endogenous serum leptin concentrations were markedly reduced in all animals undergoing daily torpor. Although simply reducing leptin concentrations below a threshold value is not sufficient for torpor initiation, reduced leptin concentrations nevertheless appear necessary for its occurrence. It is proposed that drastically reduced leptin concentrations provide a "starvation signal" to an as yet unidentified central mechanism mediating torpor initiation.  相似文献   

9.
Central administration of neuropeptide Y (NPY) stimulates hyperphagia and hyperinsulinemia. Recent evidence has suggested that the Y1 and Y5 receptor subtypes may both mediate NPY-stimulated feeding. The present study attempts to further characterize the role of central NPY receptor subtypes involved in hyperinsulinemia. NPY and peptide analogs of NPY that selectively activated the NPY Y1 or Y5 receptor subtype induced feeding and hyperinsulinemia in satiated Long Evans rats, whereas NPY analogs that selectively activated the NPY Y2 or Y4 receptor subtype did not. To determine whether NPY-induced hyperinsulinemia is secondary to its hyperphagic effect, we compared the plasma insulin levels in the presence and absence of food after a 1-min central infusion of NPY and its analogs at 15, 60, and 120 min postinfusion. Our data suggest that selective activation of central NPY Y1 receptor subtype induced hyperinsulinemia independent of food ingestion, whereas the NPY Y5 receptor-induced hyperinsulinemia was dependent on food ingestion. Central administration of the selective Y1 receptor agonist D-Arg25 NPY eventually decreased plasma glucose levels 2 h postinfusion in Long Evans rats.  相似文献   

10.
The present study evaluated the effect of the neuropeptide Y (NPY) Y1 receptor antagonists BIBO 3304 and SR 120562A and of the Y5 receptor antagonists JCF 104, JCF 109, and CGP 71683A on feeding induced either by NPY or food deprivation. In a preliminary experiment, NPY was injected into the third cerebroventricle (3V) at doses of 0.07, 0.15, 0.3, or 0.6 nmol/rat. The dose of 0.3 nmol/rat, which produced a cumulative 2-h food intake of 11.2 +/- 1.9 g/kg body weight, was chosen for the following experiments. The antagonists were injected in the 3V 1 min before NPY. The Y1 receptor antagonist BIBO 3304 significantly inhibited NPY-induced feeding at doses of 1 or 10 nmol/rat. The Y1 receptor antagonist SR 120562A, at the dose of 10 but not of 1 nmol/rat, significantly reduced the hyperphagic effect of NPY, 0.3 nmol/rat. The Y5 receptor antagonists JCF 104 and JCF 109 (1 or 10 nmol/rat) and CGP 71683A (10 or 100 nmol/rat) did not significantly modify the effect of NPY, 0.3 nmol/rat. However, JCF 104 (10 nmol/rat) and CGP 71683A (100 nmol/rat), but not JCF 109 (10 nmol/rat), significantly reduced food intake during the interval from 2 to 4 h after injection of a higher dose, 0.6 nmol/rat, of NPY. Feeding induced by 16 h of food deprivation was significantly reduced by the Y1 receptor antagonist BIBO 3304 (10 nmol/rat), but it was not significantly modified by the same dose of SR 120562A or JCF 104. These findings support the idea that the hyperphagic effect of NPY is mainly mediated by Y1 receptors. The results obtained with JCF 104 and CGP 71683A suggest that Y5 receptors may have a modulatory role in the maintenance of feeding induced by rather high doses of NPY after the main initial feeding response.  相似文献   

11.
The present study evaluated the effects of both intraperitoneal (i.p. ) and intracerebroventricular administration of selective Y(1) [(Leu(31), Pro(34))-NPY] and Y(2) [(Pro(13), Tyr(36))-NPY (13-36)] receptor agonists on food intake in satiated goldfish. Food intake (FI) was significantly increased by central administration of the Y(1) agonist (1 microg), but not by the Y(2) agonist, at 2 h postinjection. The feeding increase induced by (Leu(31), Pro(34))-NPY was in a similar magnitude to that obtained after ICV injection of the neuropeptide Y, and both feeding stimulations were reversed by the NPY (27-36), a general NPY antagonist. The i.p. administration of the agonists either did not significantly modify (Y(2) agonist) or decreased (Y(1) agonist) food intake in goldfish. These data indicate that it is the Y(1)-like (similar to Y(1) and/or Y(5)) receptor, and not Y(2), that is involved in the central modulation of the feeding behavior in goldfish. We also investigated the possible involvement of opioid peptides as mediators of the NPY stimulatory action on food intake in goldfish. The ICV administration of naloxone (10 microg), a general opioid antagonist, blocked the NPY-induced feeding in goldfish, suggesting that the opioidergic system is involved in feeding regulation by NPY.  相似文献   

12.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is involved in the regulation of emotionality including fear and anxiety, which modulate autonomic control of cardiovascular function. We therefore investigated the central effects of porcine NPY, selective Y1, Y2 and Y5 receptor agonists and a Y1 receptor antagonist on heart rate (HR) and HR variability in freely moving mice using auditory fear conditioning. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections were applied 15 min before the tone-dependent memory test. NPY dose-dependently induced bradycardia associated with decreased HR variability, and blunted the stress-induced tachycardic response. The selective Y1 receptor antagonist BIBO 3304 blocked the NPY- and Y1-receptor agonist-induced suppression of conditioned tachycardia without affecting basal HR. The tachycardia elicited by both conditioned and unconditioned stressor was effectively attenuated by the Y1 receptor agonist. These results suggest a specific contribution of Y1, but not Y2 and Y5 receptors, to modulation of emotional responses most likely unrelated to impairment or modulation of memory. The NPY-induced bradycardia is attributed to not yet characterized NPY receptor subtypes other than Y1, Y2 and Y5, or a complex receptor interaction. In conclusion, NPY mediates central inhibition of sympathetic outflow, potentially coupled with attenuation of parasympathetic tone, i.e., mechanisms that may be associated with the reported anxiolytic action.  相似文献   

13.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is an established modulator of renal function. Although NPY reduces renal blood flow and does not alter glomerular filtration rate, it enhances diuresis and natriuresis. Although initial studies on natriuresis did not detect kaliuresis, we now report that a retrospective analysis of previous studies regarding natriuresis demonstrates NPY-induced kaliuresis under several experimental conditions. Kaliuresis was observed despite a marked reduction in urinary potassium concentrations, which may explain why it has not been noted in some initial studies. In a direct comparison of NPY-induced kaliuresis and natriuresis, both effects were slow in onset (requiring >45 min to develop fully) and blocked by the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin. While natriuresis occurred solely via a Y5 receptor, kaliuresis involved a Y1 receptor and an additional receptor subtype, possibly Y2. The L-type Ca2+ entry blocker nifedipine abolished natriuresis but did not inhibit kaliuresis. A combination of experiments with the bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist icatibant, the angiotensin II receptor antagonist losartan, and the converting enzyme inhibitor ramiprilat revealed that NPY-induced natriuresis involves bradykinin while kaliuresis involves angiotensin II. We conclude that NPY-induced kaliuresis is much less pronounced than natriuresis and is mediated by distinct mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
Yokosuka M  Dube MG  Kalra PS  Kalra SP 《Peptides》2001,22(3):507-514
To identify the site(s) of NPY Y5 receptor (Y5R) mediation of NPY-induced feeding, we employed c-Fos immunostaining and a selective Y5R antagonist (Y5R-A), CGP71683A, in adult male rats. Intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of NPY stimulated feeding and c-Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) in the dorsomedial hypothalamus, supraoptic nucleus and the two subdivision of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (pPVN), the parvocellular (pPVN), and magnocellular (mPVN). Y5R-A on its own, injected either intraperitoneally or icv, neither affected feeding nor FLI in hypothalamic sites. However, Y5R-A pretreatment suppressed NPY-induced food intake and FLI selectively in the mPVN. Taken together with our previous similar finding of Y1R involvement, these results suggest that NPY receptor sites concerned with feeding behavior reside selectively in the mPVN and Y1 and Y5 receptors are either coexpressed or expressed separately in those target neurons that promote appetitive drive.  相似文献   

15.
It is well documented that neuropeptide Y (NPY) exerts a wide range of biological functions through at least five NPY Y receptor subtypes (Y1-Y5), but its immunological effects only recently came into focus. Using NPY family peptides and NPY-related receptor-specific peptides as well as Y1 and Y2 receptor antagonists, we have tested which NPY Y receptors are involved in NPY-induced modulation of rat peritoneal macrophage function in vitro. NPY and PYY increased oxidative burst in phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-stimulated macrophages involving activation of protein kinase C (PKC), and decreased it in zymosan-stimulated cells resembling inhibition of signaling pathways subsequent to binding of zymosan particles for the iC3b fragment receptor on macrophages. The combined treatment with NPY and NPY Y receptor antagonists revealed that NPY-induced potentiation of oxidative burst in PMA-stimulated cells is mediated through Y1 and Y2 receptors, while NPY-induced suppression in zymosan-stimulated cells is mediated through Y2 receptors only. NPY-related peptides differently modulated macrophage function, confirming involvement of NPY Y2 receptor in both potentiation and suppression of oxidative burst in these cells. Additionally, it was shown that NPY Y5 receptor mediated suppression of oxidative burst in PMA- and zymosan-stimulated macrophages. Taken together, the present data reveal an NPY Y1 and Y2/Y5 receptor interaction in NPY-induced modulation of macrophage functions related to inflammation.  相似文献   

16.
Overexpression of neuropeptide Y (NPY) and its receptors has been found in various cancers. In our previous study, we demonstrated expression of NPY Y5 receptor (Y5R) in various breast cancer cell lines along with Y1 receptor. In Y5R expressing BT-549 cells, NPY induced cell proliferation that was blocked by Y5R-selective antagonist CGP1683A (CGP). Here, NMR-based metabonomics was used to monitor the metabolic profile of BT-549 cells in the presence of NPY and CGP to assess the effect of Y5R activation and inhibition during NPY-induced cell proliferation. To study changes in intra and extra cellular metabolites in response to various treatments, 1D 1H-NMR spectra of both hydrophilic cell extracts and growth medium were recorded from BT-549 with three treatments: (1) NPY, (2) CGP, and (3) CGP followed by NPY (CGP/NPY). Principal component analysis and statistical significance analysis indicated changes in intracellular concentrations of seven metabolites in hydrophilic cell extracts with NPY treatment: decreases in lactate, succinate, myo-inositol, and creatine, and increases in acetate, glutamate, and aspartate. A significant increase in intracellular lactate level and attenuation of other metabolites to baseline was detected in CGP/NPY group. Also, significant decreases in lactate and increases in pyruvate were observed in growth medium from NPY treated cells. Based on the metabonomics analysis, Y5R activation induces cell proliferation by increasing the rate of glycolysis, glutaminolysis, and TCA cycle. Inhibition of Y5R by CGP counteracts NPY-induced changes in cellular metabolites. These changes may play a role in cell proliferation and migration by NPY through Y5R activation.  相似文献   

17.
Many mammals experience spontaneous declines in their food intake and body weight near the end of life, a stage we refer to as senescence. We have previously demonstrated that senescent rats have blunted food intake responses to intracerebroventricular injections of neuropeptide Y (NPY). In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that responsiveness to GABA, a putative potentiator of NPY's effect, is also diminished. Young and old male F344 rats received injections of NPY, muscimol, (MUS, a GABA-A receptor agonist), combinations of these two agents, and vehicle [artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF)] into the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Both young and old presenescent rats increased their food intake in response to NPY, MUS, and the combination of the two (in comparison to injections of aCSF). The combination treatment was generally more effective than either NPY or MUS alone. These data are consistent with suggestions that both NPY and GABA play a role in the regulation of feeding behavior. Senescent rats exhibited an attenuated NPY-induced food intake, no increase in response to MUS, and a response to NPY + MUS that was no larger than that of NPY alone. We conclude that PVN injections of GABA, as well as NPY, are less effective in stimulating feeding in senescent rats and suggest that alterations in their signaling pathways play a role in the involuntary feeding decrease seen near the end of life.  相似文献   

18.
Since NPY increases endothelial cell (EC) stickiness for leukocytes, we studied the effects of LPS, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma on its expression and action in HUVEC. Cytokines raised NPY and pro-NPY intracellular content and dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) activity. Y1 and Y2 receptors were expressed in basal conditions, and LPS, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma induced Y5 receptor expression with a concomitant extinction of Y2 receptor expression. NPY induced an intracellular calcium increase mainly mediated by Y2 and Y5 receptors in basal conditions. After stimulation with LPS, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma, calcium increase was mainly caused by Y5 receptor. The modulation of the NPY system by LPS, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma, and the NPY-induced calcium signaling suggest a role for NPY during the inflammatory response.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号