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Zinc deficiency reduces intake and produces an unusual approximately 3.5-d cycle of intake in rats. The mechanism underlying the anorexia and cycling has not yet been defined; current hypotheses suggest that alterations in amino acid metabolism and neurotransmitter concentrations may be a part of this anorexia. Recent reports indicate that appetite-stimulating neuropeptide Y (NPY) may be elevated during zinc deficiency. This suggests that a resistance to NPY may exist during zinc deficiency because NPY levels are high, yet appetite is low. The purpose of this study was to measure NPY peptide and mRNA concentrations during zinc deficiency in specific nuclei of the hypothalamus in which peptide and mRNA for NPY are known to be associated with appetite, and also to determine whether zinc-deficient rats are responsive to central infusions of NPY. Both NPY peptide levels in the paraventricular nucleus and NPY mRNA levels in the arcuate nucleus were higher (P < 0.05) in zinc-deficient rats than in zinc-adequate rats. When rats were administered exogenous NPY to the paraventricular nucleus, both zinc-deficient and zinc-adequate rats responded similarly by increasing food intake. These results suggest that NPY is elevated during zinc deficiency in an attempt to restore normal food intake levels, rather than being reduced and thereby contributing to the anorexia associated with zinc deficiency. During zinc deficiency, NPY receptors are able to bind NPY and initiate an orexigenic response.  相似文献   

3.
The central actions of insulin, on galanin (GAL) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the brain, are examined in intact satiated rats. Ventricular injections of insulin reduce both GAL and NPY gene expression and immunoreactivity in different hypothalamic areas but have no effect in extra-hypothalamic sites. Insulin applied to medial hypothalamic fragments in vitro significantly reduces GAL and NPY release. This evidence suggests that insulin acts centrally and directly on hypothalamic peptide activity under normal feeding conditions.  相似文献   

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Leptin is proposed to control food intake at least in part by regulating hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY), a stimulator of food intake, and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), an inhibitor of food intake. Ob/ob mice are leptin-deficient and would thus be expected to exhibit alterations in hypothalamic NPY and CRH. We therefore measured concentrations of NPY and CRH in discrete regions of the hypothalamus (i.e., ARC, arcuate nucleus; PVN, paraventricular nucleus; VMH, ventromedial nucleus; DMH, dorsomedial nucleus; and SCN, suprachiasmatic nucleus) of 6.5-7-wk-old ob/ob and lean mice with free access to stock diet, 24 h after food deprivation, and 1 h after refeeding. Fed ob/ob mice had 55-75% higher concentrations of NPY in the ARC, VMH and SCN than lean mice. Food deprivation increased NPY concentrations approximately 70% in the ARC, PVN and VMH of lean mice, and refeeding lowered NPY concentrations approximately 70% in the PVN of these mice. NPY in these hypothalamic regions of ob/ob mice was unresponsive to food deprivation or refeeding. The most pronounced change in CRH concentrations within the regions examined (i.e., ARC, PVN and VMH) occurred in the ARC of lean mice where refeeding lowered CRH concentrations by 75% without influencing ARC CRH concentrations in ob/ob mice. The hypothalamic concentrations of two neuropeptides involved in body weight regulation (i.e., NPY and CRH) in leptin-deficient ob/ob mice respond abnormally to abrupt changes in nutritional status.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of leptin on the levels of CRF messenger RNA (mRNA) in the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVN), on the activation of the PVN CRF cells, and on the plasma levels of corticosterone were investigated in lean (+/?) and obese (ob/ob) C57BL/6J male mice. Murine leptin was s.c. infused using osmotic minipumps. The treatment period extended to 7 days, and the daily dose of leptin delivered was 100 microg/kg. The mice were killed either in a fed state or following 24 h of total food deprivation. The starvation paradigm was employed to enhance the activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in obese mice. In situ hybridization histochemistry was performed to determine the PVN levels of CRF mRNA and the arcuate nucleus levels of neuropeptide Y mRNA. The activity of the PVN CRF cells was estimated from the number of PVN cells colocalizing CRF mRNA and the protein Fos. Leptin led to a reduction in body weight gain and fat deposition. These effects were seen in both +/? and ob/ob mice and were observed to be particularly striking in obese mutants, in which leptin also caused an important reduction in food intake. Leptin also was found to affect plasma levels of corticosterone. It lowered the high corticosterone levels of obese mutants, an effect that appeared more evident in food-deprived than in fed mice. Finally, leptin prevented the induction of CRF synthesis in the PVN and the activation of the PVN CRF neurons observed in food-deprived ob/ob mice and hindered the elevation of arcuate nucleus neuropeptide Y synthesis in ob/ob mice. Together these results suggest a role for leptin in the excessive response of the hypophysiotropic CRF system of the ob/ob mouse.  相似文献   

7.
Hypoglycemia causes hyperphagia and weight gain, through unknown peripheral and central signals. We investigated the effect of hypoglycemia on NPY and leptin expression and the ability of leptin to inhibit hypoglycemia-induced hyperphagia. Acute hypoglycemia (60 U/kg SC insulin; n = 8) increased food intake (p < 0.01) compared with controls (n = 8). Insulin- and leptin-treated rats (300 microg/kg IP leptin; n = 8) had reduced hyperphagia (p < 0.05 vs. controls; p < 0.05 vs. insulin alone) and a 15% fall in NPY mRNA levels compared with controls (p < 0.01). Chronic hypoglycemia, (20-60 U/kg/day insulin; n = 8) increased food intake compared with vehicle-treated controls (p < 0.01). Leptin and insulin administration (300 microg/kg/day IP leptin; n = 8) reduced hyperphagia (p < 0.01 vs. controls, p < 0.05 vs. insulin alone), and NPY mRNA fell by 18% vs. controls (p < 0.01). We conclude that hypoglycemia-induced hyperphagia is not mediated by either a fall in leptin or an increase in hypothalamic NPY mRNA. Leptin can inhibit feeding in hyperphagic hypoglycemic rats, and this may partly be attributable to its inhibition of the NPY neurons.  相似文献   

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The alteration in calcium transport in the liver of rats with streptozocin(STZ)-diabetic state was investigated. STZ (6 mg/100 g body weight) was subcutaneously administered in rats, and 1 or 2 weeks later they were sacrificed by bleeding. STZ administration caused a remarkable elevation of serum glucose concentration. Liver calcium content was significantly increased by STZ administration. Hepatic plasma membrane (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase activity was markedly elevated by STZ administration. This increase was completely abolished by the presence of staurosporine (10(-7)-10(-5) M), an inhibitor of protein kinase C, in the enzyme reaction mixture, suggesting an involvement of protein kinase C signalling. Moreover, the STZ-induced increase in liver plasma membrane (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase activity was significantly raised by the presence of okadaic acid (10(-5) and 10(-4) M). Meanwhile, the STZ-increased (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase activity was not appreciably altered by the presence of anti-regucalcin IgG in the reaction mixture, indicating that the activatory protein regucalcin does not participate in the elevation of the enzyme activity. The present study demonstrates that STZ-induced diabetes causes the increase in hepatic plasma membrane (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase activity of rats.  相似文献   

10.
In an attempt to understand the relationship between photorepair and dark repair in Neurospora crassa, a new mutant was isolated, which showed defects in both repair processes. The new mutant, mus-38, is moderately sensitive to UV and shows imperfect photoreactivation following UV irradiation. DNA was purified from this mutant and the other UV-sensitive mutants, and analyzed for the removal of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs). UV-specific endonuclease-sensitive sites (ESS) completely disappeared with 1 h of photoreactivation in mus-38 DNA, although the survival recovery with photoreactivation was greatly reduced in this mutant. This suggests that the insufficient survival recovery with photoreactivation in mus-38 does not result from a failure of photo-reversal of CPDs. Removal of ESS during liquid holding (dark repair) was slower in mus-38 compared to wild type. To test the possibility that this mutant was involved in excision repair, the double mutant was made between mus-38 and mus-18, which encodes a UV-damage-specific endonuclease. CPD excision in the mus-18 null mutant was severely affected but not completely inhibited. The double mutant showed a complete loss of the excision activity and was super sensitive to UV. These results indicate that mus-38 participates in an excision pathway that is different from the mus-18 pathway. The mus-38 mutant was sensitive not only to UV but also to some chemical mutagens which make adducts on DNA. Thus, mus-38 is possibly involved in an excision-repair pathway that is related to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD3 pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Our previous studies show that neuropeptide Y (NPY) is involved in mediating sympathetic nerve stimulation-induced vasoconstriction. Insulin hypoglycemia is known to produce increased sympathetic output and elevated arterial pressure. The present study examined the role of NPY in the hypertensive response to insulin by examining the effects of insulin on NPY gene expression, tissue content and release. Subcutaneous injection of insulin produced an immediate increase in plasma NPY immunoreactivity (NPYir) and delayed increases in adrenal and neuronal NPY mRNA and adrenal NPYir in rats. These results suggest that NPY may play a role in insulin-induced hypertension.  相似文献   

12.
Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus causes both a sustained activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and reduced expression of corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) mRNA in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). To investigate the role of glucocorticoids in the regulation of CRH mRNA expression in the PVN of diabetic rats, we studied surgically adrenalectomized (ADX) and sham-operated male Sprague-Dawley rats 4 days after i.v. injection of streptozotocin (STZ; 65 mg/kg i.v.) or vehicle. Among sham-operated animals, AM plasma corticosterone levels were significantly increased in diabetic as compared to nondiabetic animals (1.46+/-0.54 vs. 0.22+/-0.05 microg/dl; P <0.05), and were positively correlated to both plasma ACTH levels (r = 0.74; P = 0.015) and adrenal gland weight (r = 0.70; P = 0.025). In contrast, CRH mRNA levels measured in the PVN by in situ hybridization were inversely related to the plasma corticosterone level (r = -0.68; P = 0.045). In a second experiment, both diabetic and nondiabetic ADX rats received a continuous subcutaneous infusion of either corticosterone at one of two doses or its vehicle for 4 days. Among vehicle-treated ADX animals, STZ diabetes raised hypothalamic CRH mRNA levels, in contrast to the tendency for diabetes to lower CRH mRNA in intact rats in the first experiment. Corticosterone administration lowered CRH mRNA comparably in both diabetic and nondiabetic ADX rats. In contrast, diabetes reduced arginine vasopressin (AVP) mRNA levels in the PVN of ADX rats and blunted the inhibitory effect of glucocorticoids on AVP mRNA levels in this setting. We conclude (1) glucocorticoids are necessary for the effect of diabetes to reduce hypothalamic CRH gene expression, since diabetes causes a paradoxical increase in CRH mRNA levels in adrenalectomized animals; (2) glucocorticoid inhibition of hypothalamic CRH gene expression is intact in diabetic rats; and (3) the activation of the HPA axis by diabetes is associated with a proportionate decrease in PVN CRH gene expression. These findings support a model in which hypothalamic factors additional to CRH activate the HPA axis in uncontrolled diabetes, and inhibit CRH gene expression indirectly by negative glucocorticoid feedback.  相似文献   

13.
Recently Zhang et al. cloned a gene that is expressed only in adipose tissue of the mouse. The obese phenotype of the ob/ob mouse is linked to a mutation in the obese gene that results in expression of a truncated inactive protein. Human and rat homologues for this gene are known. Previous experiments predict such a hormone to have a hypothalamic target. Hypothalamic neuropeptide Y stimulates food intake, decreases thermogenesis, and increases plasma insulin and corticosterone levels making it a potential target. Here we express the obese protein in Escherichia coli and find that it suppresses food intake and decreases body weight dramatically when administered to normal and ob/ob mice but not db/db (diabetic) mice, which are thought to lack the appropriate receptor. High-affinity binding was detected in the rat hypothalamus. One mechanism by which this protein regulated food intake and metabolism was inhibition of neuropeptide-Y synthesis and release.  相似文献   

14.
Recent data have suggested that adipocytes synthesize and secrete a 16 kDa peptide which acts centrally to regulate weight gain by suppressing appetite and activating the sympathetic nervous system. To exert such effects, it may function as an endogenous ligand in the CNS, since specific receptors (OB-R) have been recently reported to be widely distributed in the brain. We have speculated that this peptide, now known as leptin, may act centrally by stimulating the release of corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH), a recognized potent inhibitory modulator of appetite. We tested in vitro the effect of murine leptin on CRH secretion in the dose range of 0.1 pM-100 nM. The static rat hypothalamic incubation system used involved fresh hypothalamic explants maintained in EBSS with consecutive 20 min incubations, and estimation of CRH concentrations in the medium by a specific and sensitive radioimmunoassay. The effect of heat-denatured leptin at a dose of 1 nM and 10 nM, was also investigated. Any possible modulation of leptin effects by adrenergic pathways was then explored by coincubating hypothalami with leptin 10 nM and equimolar concentrations of the alpha 1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin or the beta-adrenergic antagonist propranolol. The active leptin, but not the heat-inactivated peptide, caused a dose-dependent stimulation of CRH release in vitro (p < 0.05- < 0.0001 vs control), with a plateau effect at a dose of 10 nM. The addition of either prazosin or propranolol was without effect on leptin-dependent CRH stimulation. These findings are consistent with the reported presence of leptin receptors in the rat brain, and suggest that leptin may act to regulate appetite at least in part by directly modulating the secretion of CRH from the hypothalamus. It would also appear that such effect occurs via a non-adrenergic mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
This investigation examined in vivo the relationship between the nucleotide cAMP and hypothalamic levels of two peptides, neuropeptide Y (NPY) and galanin (GAL), which are known to potentiate feeding behavior. In brain-cannulated rats, third ventricular injections of N6,2'-O-dibutyryl cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate ((Bu)2cAMP, 25 micrograms), compared to saline, caused a significant increase in NPY levels in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) and medial parvocellular portion of the paraventricular nucleus (mPVN), while having no impact in other hypothalamic areas. These site-specific changes in NPY occurred in the absence of any alteration in circulating levels of insulin, corticosterone, aldosterone or glucose, or of changes in hypothalamic levels of GAL. These findings implicate cAMP as having regulatory functions within specific hypothalamic NPY-synthesizing neurons, projecting from the ARC to the mPVN, that are believed to be involved in energy homeostasis.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the adaptations of lipid metabolism, with special emphasis on tissue lipoprotein lipase, to negative energy balance brought by chronic treatment of obese ob/ob mice with leptin. DESIGN: According to a 2 x 2 factorial analysis, lean and obese C57BL/6J mice were subcutaneously infused with leptin (100 micrograms.kg-1.day-1) or vehicle (phosphate-buffered saline) during seven days. RESULTS: Cumulative food intake and final body weight of vehicle-infused obese mice were twofold higher than in lean controls. Leptin decreased cumulative food intake and body weight of obese, but not lean mice. Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity in white inguinal and epididymal and brown interscapular adipose tissues of control obese mice was at least twofold higher than in lean mice, but comparable in the vastus lateralis muscle. Leptin treatment of obese mice significantly lowered LPL activity to that of lean mice in all tissues examined. Vehicle-infused obese mice had higher liver triglyceride content and were hypertriglyceridemic compared to lean mice, and triglyceride concentrations in plasma and liver were decreased proportionally after leptin treatment. Leptin lowered glycemia and insulinemia of obese mice to lean levels and decreased plasma corticosterone. Leptin infusion had no notable effect on tissue lipoprotein lipase nor plasma variables of lean mice. CONCLUSIONS: Leptin infusion abolished hyperinsulinemia in the ob/ob mouse, an effect that was probably responsible for the concomitant normalization of adipose LPL activity. This study shows that decreased LPL activity, plasma triglyceride concentrations and hepatic triglyceride production constitute some of the adaptive peripheral adaptations of lipid metabolism, which accompany the reduction in fat mass accretion brought by leptin treatment of the obese ob/ob mouse.  相似文献   

17.
Reduction in the activity of the alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) system causes obesity, and infusions of alpha-MSH can produce satiety, raising the possibility that alpha-MSH may mediate physiological satiety signals. Since alpha-MSH is coded for by the pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) gene, we examined if POMC gene expression would be inhibited by fasting in normal mice or in models of obesity characterized by leptin insufficiency (ob/ob) or leptin insensitivity (db/db). In wild-type mice, hypothalamic POMC mRNA was decreased > 60% after a 2-day fast and was positively correlated with leptin mRNA. Similarly, compared with controls, POMC mRNA was decreased by at least 60% in both db/db and ob/ob mice. POMC mRNA was negatively correlated with both neuropeptide Y (NPY) and melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) mRNA. Finally, treatment of both male and female ob/ob mice with leptin stimulated hypothalamic POMC mRNA by about threefold. These results suggest that impairment in production, processing, or responsiveness to alpha-MSH may be a common feature of obesity and that hypothalamic POMC neurons, stimulated by leptin, may constitute a link between leptin and the melanocortin system.  相似文献   

18.
Because energy homeostasis depends on a continuous balance between food intake, energy expenditure, and energy storage, it was expected that neuropeptide Y (NPY) could act not only on food intake but also on metabolic parameters. Using an original calorimetric device that allows the computation of the background metabolism (energy expenditure free from the cost of locomotor activity), we assessed the effect of a microinjection of NPY upon the quantitative (background metabolism, thermic effect of food) and qualitative (respiratory quotient) components of energy metabolism. NPY was injected into the juxtafornical hypothalamus at a dose that promotes feeding behavior (1 microg/0.5 microL) and enhances locomotor activity. Although total metabolism was increased proportionally to locomotion, no effect of NPY on background metabolism was observed when no food was available. Only following a calibrated meal given 30 min after the microinjection did NPY induce a delayed decrease in respiratory quotient whereas the postprandial background metabolism remained unaffected. In conclusion, only the new-generation calorimeters can show that the NPY-induced rise in overall metabolic rate is entirely accounted for by the unavoidable enhancement in locomotor activity and that the only metabolic effect of NPY is the delayed postprandial respiratory quotient decrease, suggesting a postabsorptive orientation toward more lipid utilization.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of leptin production in ob/ob mice injected with a plasmid expression vector containing mouse leptin cDNA in the tibialis anterior muscle were investigated. A significant reduction in food intake (-18%, p < 0.01) along the experimental period was found after DNA injection, while differences in body weight gain were only significant (-41%, p < 0.05) when determined between days 2.9 of the study. Concerning adipocytes metabolism, there was a significant increase in oxygen consumption in vitro (+34%, p < 0.05) and in basal lipolysis (+151%, p < 0.05) in DNA-injected mice compared to PBS-injected animals. Our results confirm that functional leptin can be produced in muscle and released into the blood stream and give new support to the fact that leptin may have direct auto- or paracrine effects on adipocytes, possible contributing to the weight- and fat-reducing effects of leptin in ob/ob mice.  相似文献   

20.
The discovery of the obese gene in the mouse and its conserved homologue in humans has led to important discoveries in energy metabolism. One of the chief findings was the fact that the expression of the leptin gene was regulated and that it, in turn, could regulate metabolism and behavior. Much of the literature has focused on the physiological role of leptin in driving processes as diverse as reproduction, starvation defence, feeding behavior or body weight, all dependent on expression levels of the ob gene. Here, we will describe our work, in which we have begun to elucidate the regulatory processes controlling obese gene expression.  相似文献   

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