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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
), one of the most abundant peptides in rat and human brains, appears to act in the hypothalamus to stimulate feeding. It was first suggested that the
NPY
Y1 receptor (Y1R) was involved in feeding stimulated by
NPY
. More recently a novel
NPY
receptor subtype (Y5R) was identified in rat and human as the
NPY
feeding receptor subtype. There is, however, no absolute consensus since selective Y1R antagonists also antagonize
NPY
-induced hyperphagia. Nevertheless, new anti-
obesity
drugs may emerge from further pharmacological characterization of the
NPY
receptors and their antagonists. A large panel of Y1R and Y5R antagonists (such as CGP71683A, BIBO3304, BIBP3226, 1229U91, and SYNAPTIC and BANYU derivatives but also patentable in-house-synthesized compounds) have been evaluated through in vitro and in vivo tests in an attempt to establish a predictive relationship between the binding selectivity for human receptors, the potency in isolated organs assays, and the inhibitory effect on food intake in both normal and obese hyperphagic rodents. Although these results do not allow one to conclude on the implication of a single receptor subtype at the molecular level, this approach is crucial for the design of novel
NPY
receptor antagonists with potential use as anti-
obesity
drugs and for evaluation of their possible adverse peripheral side effects, such as hypotension.
...
PMID:Food intake regulation in rodents: Y5 or Y1 NPY receptors or both? 1073 80
The neuropeptides, monoamines and many drugs involved with modulating food intake and fat stores have reciprocal effects on sympathetic activity and thermogenesis. Both serotonin, acting through 5HT1B/2C receptors, and norepinephrine acting through beta2 and/or beta3 receptors reduce food intake and augment sympathetic activity.
Neuropeptide Y
, beta-endorphin, orexin, galanin and melanin concentrating hormone all increase food intake and, where tested, reduce sympathetic activity. In contrast, a larger number of peptides including cholecystokinin, corticotrophin-releasing hormone/urocortin, enterostatin, leptin, CART and alpha-MSH reduce food intake and increase sympathetic activity. Nicotine, prostaglandin, dexfenfluramine and sibutramine also have this reciprocal effect on feeding and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity. Chronic administration of neuropeptide Y (NPY) can produce chronically increased food intake and
obesity
. This syndrome is similar to the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) syndrome and suggests that NPY must be acting as an inhibitory signal to stimulate a feeding system and inhibit sympathetic activity. The melanocortin receptor system may be particularly important in modulating food intake, because a transgenic mouse which does not express melanocortin-4 receptors is massively overweight. Adrenal glucocorticoids are important in
obesity
since adrenalectomy will reverse or prevent the development of all forms of
obesity
. The clinical importance of the sympathetic nervous system and food intake is emphasized by the inverse relation of sympathetic activity and body fat. The inhibition of food intake, lower body fat stores and higher energy expenditure in smokers also support this hypothesis. The reciprocal relationship between food intake and sympathetic activity is robust, suggesting that beta receptors in the periphery and brain may be involved in the control of feeding and a reduction in food intake in humans accounts for most of the weight loss with ephedrine and caffeine. We conclude that the inhibition of feeding by activating the SNS is an important satiety system which helps regulate body fat stores.
...
PMID:Reciprocal relation of food intake and sympathetic activity: experimental observations and clinical implications. 1099
The hypothalamus is the focus of many peripheral signals and neural pathways that control energy homeostasis and body weight. Emphasis has moved away from anatomical concepts of 'feeding' and 'satiety' centres to the specific neurotransmitters that modulate feeding behaviour and energy expenditure. We have chosen three examples to illustrate the physiological roles of hypothalamic neurotransmitters and their potential as targets for the development of new drugs to treat
obesity
and other nutritional disorders.
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) is expressed by neurones of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) that project to important appetite-regulating nuclei, including the paraventricular nucleus (PVN).
NPY
injected into the PVN is the most potent central appetite stimulant known, and also inhibits thermogenesis; repeated administration rapidly induces
obesity
. The ARC
NPY
neurones are stimulated by starvation, probably mediated by falls in circulating leptin and insulin (which both inhibit these neurones), and contribute to the increased hunger in this and other conditions of energy deficit. They therefore act homeostatically to correct negative energy balance. ARC
NPY
neurones also mediate hyperphagia and
obesity
in the ob/ob and db/db mice and fa/fa rat, in which leptin inhibition is lost through mutations affecting leptin or its receptor. Antagonists of the Y5 receptor (currently thought to be the
NPY
'feeding' receptor) have anti-
obesity
effects. Melanocortin-4 receptors (MC4-R) are expressed in various hypothalamic regions, including the ventromedial nucleus and ARC. Activation of MC4-R by agonists such as alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (a cleavage product of pro-opiomelanocortin which is expressed in ARC neurones) inhibits feeding and causes weight loss. Conversely, MC4-R antagonists such as 'agouti' protein and agouti gene-related peptide (AGRP) stimulate feeding and cause
obesity
. Ectopic expression of agouti in the hypothalamus leads to
obesity
in the AVY mouse, while AGRP is co-expressed by
NPY
neurones in the ARC. Synthetic MC4-R agonists may ultimately find use as anti-
obesity
drugs in human subjects Orexins-A and -B, derived from prepro-orexin, are expressed in specific neurones of the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA). Orexin-A injected centrally stimulates eating and prepro-orexin mRNA is up regulated by fasting and hypoglycaemia. The LHA is important in receiving sensory signals from the gut and liver, and in sensing glucose, and orexin neurones may be involved in stimulating feeding in response to falls in plasma glucose.
...
PMID:The hypothalamus and the regulation of energy homeostasis: lifting the lid on a black box. 1099 54
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) is a 36 amino acid amidated peptide which has now emerged as an important regulator of feeding behaviour. Upon intracerebroventricular (icv.) administration,
NPY
produces a pronounced feeding response in a variety of species. The actions of
NPY
are believed to be mediated by a family of receptor subtypes named Y1 - y6. Recent studies suggest that the Y1 and Y5 receptor subtypes are intimately involved in
NPY
induced feeding. This review presents preclinical data obtained with receptor subtype selective agonists and antagonists as well as findings from knockout mice. These new data suggest that
NPY
receptor antagonists may become an additional option for treating human
obesity
.
...
PMID:The role of NPY in metabolic homeostasis: implications for obesity therapy. 1106 Jul 46
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) has been shown to play an important role in the regulation of food intake and energy balance. Pharmacological data suggests that the Y5 receptor subtype contributes to the effects of
NPY
on appetite, and therefore a Y5 antagonist might be a useful therapeutic agent for the treatment of
obesity
. In attempts to identify potential Y5 antagonists, a series of pyrrolo[3, 2-d]pyrimidine derivatives was prepared and evaluated for their ability to bind to Y5 receptors in vitro. We report here the synthesis and initial structure-activity relationship investigations for this class of compounds. The target compounds were prepared by a variety of synthetic routes designed to modify both the substitution and the heterocyclic core of the pyrrolo[3,2-d]pyrimidine lead 1. In addition to identifying several potent Y5 antagonists for evaluation as potential antiobesity agents, a pharmacophore model for the human Y5 receptor is presented.
...
PMID:Structure-activity relationships of a series of pyrrolo[3,2-d]pyrimidine derivatives and related compounds as neuropeptide Y5 receptor antagonists. 1106 24
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) is a powerful orexigenic factor, and alphaMSH is a melanocortin (MC) peptide that induces satiety by activating the MC4 receptor subtype. Genetic models with disruption of MC4 receptor signaling are associated with
obesity
. In the present study, a 7-day intracerebroventricular infusion to male rats of either the MC receptor antagonist SHU9119 or porcine
NPY
(10 nmol/day) was shown to strongly stimulate food and water intake and to markedly increase fat pad mass. Very high plasma leptin levels were found in
NPY
-treated rats (27.1 +/- 1.8 ng/ml compared with 9.9 +/- 0.9 ng/ml in SHU9119-treated animals and 2.1 +/- 0.2 ng/ml in controls). As expected,
NPY
infusion induced hypogonadism, characterized by an impressive decrease in seminal vesicle and prostate weights. No such effects were seen with the SHU9119 infusion. Similarly, whereas the somatotropic axis of
NPY
-treated rats was fully inhibited, this axis was normally activated in the obese SHU9119-treated rats. Chronic infusion of SHU9119 strikingly reduced hypothalamic gene expression for
NPY
(65.2 +/- 3.6% of controls), whereas gene expression for POMC was increased (170 +/- 19%).
NPY
infusion decreased hypothalamic gene expression for both POMC and
NPY
(70 +/- 9% and 75.4 +/- 9.5%, respectively). In summary, blockade of the MC4 receptor subtype by SHU9119 was able to generate an
obesity
syndrome with no apparent side-effects on the reproductive and somatotropic axes. In this situation, it is unlikely that hyperphagia was driven by increased
NPY
release, because hypothalamic
NPY
gene expression was markedly reduced, suggesting that hyperphagia mainly resulted from loss of the satiety signal driven by MC peptides.
NPY
infusion produced hypogonadism and hyposomatotropism in the face of markedly elevated plasma leptin levels and an important reduction in hypothalamic POMC synthesis. In this situation
NPY
probably acted both by exacerbating food intake through Y receptors and by reducing the satiety signal driven by MC peptides.
...
PMID:Chronic blockade of the melanocortin 4 receptor subtype leads to obesity independently of neuropeptide Y action, with no adverse effects on the gonadotropic and somatotropic axes. 1110 50
Melanin concentrating hormone (MCH) and the orexins (A and B) have been identified as neuropeptides localized to the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) and are potential regulators of energy homeostasis. Potential factors regulating expression of both MCH and the orexins include fasting and leptin. Previous studies have generated conflicting data and, as there is little leptin receptor expressed in the lateral hypothalamus, it is likely that any observed leptin effects on these peptides are indirect. In this study, we examined MCH and preproorexin expression in mice in physiological states of starvation, with or without leptin administration, in addition to characterizing MCH and preproorexin expression in well-known
obesity
models, including ob/ob and UCP-DTA mice.
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) expression in the arcuate nucleus was used as a positive control. After a 60-h fast, expression of both
NPY
and MCH mRNA was increased (by 148 and 33%, respectively) while preproorexin expression in the murine LHA did not change. Leptin administration to fasted mice blunted the rise in MCH and
NPY
expression towards control levels. In contrast, there was a 78% increase in preproorexin expression in fasted mice in response to peripheral leptin administration. MCH expression was increased (by 116%) in ob/ob mice at baseline, as we have previously reported. In addition, leptin treatment of ob/ob mice blunted the increase in MCH expression. In contrast, preproorexin expression did not differ in the leptin-deficient ob/ob mice or in the obese hyperleptinemic brown adipose tissue deficient (UCP-DTA) mice in comparison with controls. In summary, MCH expression is increased in two states of decreased leptin, fasting and ob/ob mice, and leptin replacement blunts MCH expression in both paradigms. Thus, MCH expression appears to be regulated by leptin. In contrast, preproorexin expression does not respond acutely to fasting, although it is acutely increased by leptin treatment during fasting. These preproorexin responses are in contrast to those seen with well-characterized orexigenic neuropeptides, such as
NPY
and AgRP, suggesting that appetite regulation may not be a significant physiological role of orexins. This conclusion is further supported by the observation that orexin ablated mice have arousal and not feeding deficits.
...
PMID:Characterization of melanin concentrating hormone and preproorexin expression in the murine hypothalamus. 1125 73
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) in the hypothalamus exerts multiple physiological functions including stimulation of adipogenic pathways such as feeding and insulin secretion as well as inhibition of the somatotropic and gonadotropic axes. Since hypothalamic
NPY
-ergic activity is increased by negative energy balance,
NPY
enables coordinated regulation of growth and reproduction in parallel with energy availability. Chronic pathological increases in central
NPY
-ergic activity contribute to
obesity
. Many of the adipogenic effects of
NPY
are specifically dependent on adrenal glucocorticoids. However, in the current study we show that central
NPY
does not require adrenal hormones to inhibit the somatotropic and gonadotropic axes in rats. Male adrenalectomized and sham-operated normal rats were intracerebroventricularly (ICV) infused with
NPY
(15 microg/day) or saline for 5-7 days, and plasma leptin, insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1) and testosterone were assayed, and epididymal white adipose tissue (WATe) was weighed. In normal intact rats, WATe weight and leptinemia were significantly increased by
NPY
, and these effects were prevented by adrenalectomy. In normal rats,
NPY
markedly reduced plasma IGF-1 levels (470 +/- 40 versus 1260 +/- 90 ng/ml) and testosterone (0.53 +/- 0.28 versus 5.4 +/- 0.80 nmol/l in saline-infused controls, p < 0.0001). Adrenalectomy decreased plasma IGF-1 concentrations to 290 +/- 30 (p < 0.0001 versus normal rats), which were significantly reduced further by
NPY
. However, adrenalectomy had no significant effect on basal nor on
NPY
-induced plasma testosterone concentrations. In conclusion unlike the stimulatory effects of
NPY
on fat mass and leptinemia,
NPY
-induced inhibition of the somatotropic and gonadotropic axes in male rats do not require adrenal hormones.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of central neuropeptide Y on the somatotropic and gonadotropic axes in male rats are independent of adrenal hormones. 1128 3
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) is demonstrated to play an important role in central control of voluntary feed intake (FI) of a variety of species. The commercial broiler chicken has been intensively selected over generations for increased body weight, achieved largely through increased FI. This has resulted in a contemporary animal that does not regulate FI to maintain energy balance, and represents a model for hyperphagia and
obesity
if allowed unrestricted access to feed. In the present study, the distribution of
NPY
mRNA was mapped in the brain of juvenile, broiler-strain chicken, and results interpreted in the context of previous data for strains that do not exhibit hyperphagia.
NPY
mRNA was widely distributed in the broiler brain, and highly expressed in the hippocampus, nucleus commissurae pallii, infundibular hypothalamic nucleus, nucleus pretectalis pars ventralis and neurons around the nucleus rotundus. Moderately labeled neurons were found in the lateral septal organ, nucleus periventricularis hypothalamus and nucleus paraventricularis magnocellularis. The pallium exhibited only sparse labeling. Generally, the distribution of cell groups expressing
NPY
mRNA was consistent with those regions exhibiting
NPY
immunoreactivity, and also matches the distribution of receptor binding sites reported in the literature for the chicken brain. This suggests that
NPY
may be involved in functions controlled by these regions. The observation of
NPY
gene expression in brain regions involved in appetite regulation is consistent with the recognized importance of
NPY
in FI regulation in a variety of species, and with the chronic hyperphagia, characteristic of the broiler.
...
PMID:The distribution of neuropeptide Y gene expression in the chicken brain. 1130 79
Neuropeptide Y
(
NPY
) is involved in the central regulation of appetite, sexual behavior, and reproductive function. We have previously shown that chronic infusion of
NPY
into the lateral ventricle of normal rats produced an
obesity
syndrome characterized by hyperphagia, hyperinsulinism and collapse of reproductive function. We further demonstrated that acute inhibition of LH secretion in castrated rats was preferentially mediated by the
NPY
receptor subtype 5 (Y(5)). In the present study, the effects of chronic, central infusion of
NPY
, or the mixed Y2-Y5 agonist PYY(3-36), were evaluated both in normal male C57BL/6J mice and Sprague-Dawley rats. After a 7-day infusion to male mice, both
NPY
and PYY(3-36) at 5 nmol per day, induced marked hyperphagia leading to significant increases in body and fat pad weights. Furthermore, both compounds markedly reduced several markers of the reproductive axis. In the rat study, PYY(3-36) was more active than
NPY
to inhibit the pituitary-testicular axis, confirming the importance of the Y5 subtype for such effects. In the mouse, chronic
NPY
infusion induced a sustained increase in corticosterone and insulin secretion. Plasma leptin levels were also markedly increased possibly explaining the observed reduction in gene expression for hypothalamic
NPY
. Gene expression for hypothalamic POMC was reduced in the
NPY
- or PYY(3-36)-infused mice, suggesting that
NPY
exacerbated food intake by both acting through its own receptor(s), and reducing the satiety signal driven by the POMC-derived alpha-MSH. The present study in the mouse suggests in analogy with available rat data, that constant exposure to elevated
NPY
in the hypothalamic area unabatedly enhances food intake leading to an
obesity
syndrome including increased adiposity, insulin resistance, hypercorticism, and hypogonadism, reminiscent of the phenotype of the ob/ob mouse, that displays elevated hypothalamic
NPY
secondary to lack of leptin negative feedback action.
...
PMID:Chronic administration of neuropeptide Y into the lateral ventricle of C57BL/6J male mice produces an obesity syndrome including hyperphagia, hyperleptinemia, insulin resistance, and hypogonadism. 1173 9
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