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EVIDENCE FOR NEUROPEPTIDE Y MEDIATION OF EATING PRODUCED BY FOOD-DEPRIVATION AND FOR A VARIANT OF THE Y1-RECEPTOR MEDIATING THIS PEPTIDES EFFECT
Author(s): STANLEY BG, MAGDALIN W, SEIRAFI A, NGUYEN MM, LEIBOWITZ SF
Source: PEPTIDES    Volume: 13    Issue: 3    Pages: 581-587    Published: MAY-JUN 1992  
Times Cited: 233     References: 49     
Abstract: Neuropeptide Y (NPY) elicits eating when injected directly into the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) or perifornical hypothalamus (PFH). To identify the essential regions of the NPY molecule and the relative contributions of Y1 and Y2 receptors, the eating stimulatory potency of NPY was compared to that of its fragments, analogues, and agonists when injected into the PVN or PFH of satiated rats. Additionally, antisera to NPY was injected into the cerebral ventricles (ICV) to determine whether passive immunization suppresses the eating produced by mild food deprivation. Tests with NPY fragments revealed that NPY(2-36) was surprisingly potent, nearly three times more so than intact NPY. In contrast, fragments with further N-terminal deletions were progressively less effective or ineffective, as was the free acid form of NPY. Collectively, this suggests that both N- and C-terminal regions of NPY participate in the stimulation of eating. Tests with agonists revealed that the putative Y1 agonist [Pro34]NPY elicited a strong dose-dependent feeding response, while the putative Y2 agonist, C2-NPY, had only a small effect at the highest doses. Although this suggests mediation by Y1 receptors, the uncharacteristically high potency of NPY(2-36) may additionally suggest that the receptor subtype underlying feeding is distinct from that mediating other responses. Additional results revealed that ICV injection of antisera to NPY, which should inactivate endogenous NPY, produced a concentration-dependent suppression of eating induced by mild food deprivation. This finding, along with published work demonstrating enhanced levels of hypothalamic NPY in food-deprived rats, suggests that endogenous NPY mediates the eating produced by deprivation.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Reprint Address: STANLEY, BG (reprint author), UNIV CALIF RIVERSIDE, DEPT NEUROSCI, RIVERSIDE, CA 92521 USA
Addresses:
1. UNIV CALIF RIVERSIDE, DEPT PSYCHOL, RIVERSIDE, CA 92521 USA
2. ROCKEFELLER UNIV, NEW YORK, NY 10021 USA
Publisher: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD, ENGLAND OX5 1GB
Subject Category: Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Pharmacology & Pharmacy
IDS Number: JB248
ISSN: 0196-9781
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