Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Progressive wasting is common in many types of cancer and is one of the most important factors leading to early death in cancer patients. Weight loss is a potent stimulus to food intake in normal humans and animals. The persistence of anorexia in cancer patients, therefore, implies a failure of this adaptive feeding response, although the weight loss in the patients differs from that found in simple starvation. Tremendous progress has been made in the last 5 years with regard to the regulation of feeding and body weight. It has been demonstrated that leptin, a hormone secreted by adipose tissue, is an integral component of the homeostatic loop of body weight regulation. Leptin acts to control food intake and energy expenditure via neuropeptidergic effector molecules within the hypothalamus. Complex interactions among the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems affect the loop and induce behavioral and metabolic responses. A number of cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukins 1 and 6, IFN-gamma, leukemia inhibitory factor, and ciliary neurotrophic factor have been proposed as mediators of the cachectic process. Cytokines may play a pivotal role in long-term inhibition of feeding by mimicking the hypothalamic effect of excessive negative feedback signaling from leptin. This could be done by persistent stimulation of anorexigenic neuropeptides such as corticotropin-releasing factor, as well as by inhibition of the neuropeptide Y orexigenic network that consists of opioid peptides and galanin, in addition to the newly identified melanin-concentrating hormone, orexin, and agouti-related peptide. Information is being gathered, although it is still insufficient, on such abnormalities in the hypothalamic neuropeptide circuitry in tumor-bearing animals that coincide with the development of anorexia and cachexia. Characterization of the feeding-associated gene products have revealed new biochemical pathways and molecular targets for pharmacological intervention that will likely lead to new treatments. Although therapeutic intervention using neuropeptide agonists/antagonists is now directed at obesity treatment, it may also have an effect on treating cancer anorexia-cachexia, especially when combined with other agents that have effects on muscle and protein breakdown.
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PMID:Cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome: are neuropeptides the key? 1049 94

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.
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PMID:The hypothalamus and the regulation of energy homeostasis: lifting the lid on a black box. 1099 54

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is thought to play a crucial role in the normal hypothalamic response to starvation. After a period of food restriction, increased release of NPY induces hunger and hyperphagia, and helps to restore body weight to its set point. Persistent anorexia in rats with experimental colitis implies failure of this adaptive feeding response. In vivo NPY release and regional hypothalamic NPY concentrations were measured in rats with trinitrobenzenesulphonic acid (TNBS)-induced colitis, healthy controls and animals pair-fed to match the food intake of the colitic group. Food intake in the colitic group was assessed after administration of NPY and two other potent orexigenic peptides: melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and hypocretin (orexin-A). Food intake was decreased by 30-80% below control values for 5 days in the colitic rats. In both the pair-fed and colitic groups, release of NPY in the paraventricular nucleus was significantly increased compared with free-feeding controls. Intraventricular or intrahypothalamic administration of NPY, MCH or hypocretin elicited a feeding response in healthy controls, but not in the colitic group. In summary, animals with TNBS-colitis and anorexia show an appropriate increase in hypothalamic NPYergic activity. However, the failure of NPY and other orexigenic peptides to increase feeding in the colitic group indicates suppression of feeding, either by inhibition of a common downstream hypothalamic neuronal pathway or by induction of one or more potent anorexigenic agents.
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PMID:Role of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y and orexigenic peptides in anorexia associated with experimental colitis in the rat. 1117 Dec 92

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.
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PMID:Characterization of melanin concentrating hormone and preproorexin expression in the murine hypothalamus. 1125 73

The hypothalamus regulates energy intake by integrating the degree of starvation or satiation with the status of the environment through a variety of neuronal and blood-derived signals. Ghrelin, a peptide produced in the stomach and hypothalamus, stimulates feeding and GH secretion. Centrally administered ghrelin exerts an orexigenic activity through the neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related protein systems. The interaction between ghrelin and other hypothalamic orexigenic peptides, however, has not been clarified. Here, we investigated the anatomical interactions and functional relationship between ghrelin and two orexigenic peptides, orexin and melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH), present in the lateral hypothalamus. Ghrelin-immunoreactive axonal terminals made direct synaptic contacts with orexin-producing neurons. Intracerebroventricular administration of ghrelin induced Fos expression, a marker of neuronal activation, in orexin-producing neurons but not in MCH-producing neurons. Ghrelin remained competent to induce Fos expression in orexin-producing neurons following pretreatment with anti-NPY IgG. Pretreatment with anti-orexin-A IgG and anti-orexin-B IgG, but not anti-MCH IgG, attenuated ghrelin-induced feeding. Administration of NPY receptor antagonist further attenuated ghrelin-induced feeding in rats treated with anti-orexin-IgGs. Ghrelin-induced feeding was also suppressed in orexin knockout mice. This study identifies a novel hypothalamic pathway that links ghrelin and orexin in the regulation of feeding behavior and energy homeostasis.
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PMID:Ghrelin-induced food intake is mediated via the orexin pathway. 1263 35

We have been using mature male sheep to study the ways in which nutrition affects reproduction, with a focus on the brain-pituitary axis and, in particular, GnRH activity. The sheep model has four major advantages for such studies. Firstly, sheep are large enough to support long periods of frequent serial sampling of peripheral blood, hypophyseal portal blood and cerebrospinal fluid from the cerebral ventricles. Importantly, this can be done with freely moving animals and, thus, avoids many of the potential complications associated with restraint. The second advantage, particularly relevant to nutrition-reproduction interactions, is the vast history of nutritional research for this species, providing us with techniques (for example, gut cannulation) and an extensive database on the requirements of sheep for energy, protein and specific dietary components such as amino acids, fatty acids and trace elements. Thirdly, subtle manipulations of diet can be used that cover the range seen in the real world, where animals (including humans) rarely encounter the uninterrupted, ad libitum food supplies that are normal for laboratory animals. Within this normal range of conditions, clear reproductive outcomes can be measured without resorting to starvation and both short- and long-term responses can be studied. Finally, the sheep model has an intrinsic economic relevance and findings from sheep can be transposed readily to other agricultural mammals. The sheep model is also relevant to human biology, often directly, but also indirectly because it often leads us to question the significance of findings from studies with rodents. Using mature male sheep to study the reproductive endocrine responses to acute and chronic changes in diet, we have shown that glucose does not appear to be involved directly, but that fatty acids can stimulate GnRH-dependent pathways that initiate changes in testicular function. Our work also indicates that GnRH-independent (perhaps also neuroendocrine) mechanisms may be involved. In the brain, it seems likely that intracerebral insulin and orexin are important mediators of the GnRH response to nutritional changes, but it is unlikely that leptin plays a role, at least in mature animals.
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PMID:The mature male sheep: a model to study the effects of nutrition on the reproductive axis. 1269 84

Sleep research on eating disorders has addressed two major questions: (1) the effects of chronic starvation in anorexia nervosa and of rapidly fluctuating eating patterns in bulimia nervosa on the sleep regulating processes and (2) the search for a significant neurobiological relationship between eating disorders and major depression. At present, the latter question appears to be resolved, since most of the available evidences clearly underline the notion that eating disorders (such as anorexia and bulimia nervosa) and affective disorders are two distinct entities. Regarding the effects of starvation on sleep regulation, recent research in healthy humans and in animals demonstrates that such a condition results in a fragmentation of sleep and a reduction of slow wave sleep. Although several peptides are supposed to be involved in these regulatory processes (i.e. CCK, orexin, leptin), their mode of action is still poorly understood. In opposite to these experimentally induced sleep disturbances are the findings that the sleep patterns in eating disorder patients per se do not markedly differ from those in healthy subjects. However, when focusing on the so-called restricting anorexics, who maintain their chronic underweight by strictly dieting, the expected effects of malnutrition on sleep can be ascertained. Furthermore, at least partial weight restoration results in a 'deepening' of nocturnal sleep in the anorexic patients. However, our knowledge about the neurobiological systems (as well as their circadian pattern of activity) that transmit the effects of starvation and of weight restoration on sleep is still limited and should be extended to metabolic signals mediating sleep.
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PMID:Sleep in eating disorders. 1503 50

The hypothalamus and other brain regions that control energy homeostasis contain neuronal populations that produce specific neuropeptides which have experimental effects on feeding behavior and body weight. Here, we describe examples of neuropeptides that exert 'anabolic' effects, notably stimulation of feeding and increased body weight. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) are inhibited by leptin and insulin, and thus are stimulated in states of energy deficit and fat loss, e.g., underfeeding. NPY neuronal overactivity contributes to enhanced hunger and food-seeking activity under these conditions. The lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) contains specific neuronal populations that affect feeding in different ways. Neurons expressing the appetite-stimulating peptide orexin A are stimulated by starvation (but not food restriction) and by hypoglycemia, but only if food is withheld. Orexin neurons are apparently activated by low glucose but are promptly inhibited by visceral feeding signals, probably mediated via vagal sensory pathway and the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS); a short-term role in initiating feeding seems most likely. Other LHA neurons express melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH), which transiently increases food intake when injected centrally. MCH neurons may be regulated by leptin, insulin and glucose. Glucose-sensing neurons in the hypothalamus and elsewhere are sensitive to other cues of nutritional state, including visceral satiety signals (transmitted via the vagus) and orexin A. Thus, long- and short-term humoral and neural signals interact with each other to meet diverse nutritional needs, and anabolic neuropeptides are important in the overall integration of energy homeostasis. Clarifying the underlying mechanisms will be essential to understanding normal energy balance and the pathogenesis and treatment of disorders, such as obesity and cachexia.
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PMID:Anabolic neuropeptides. 1515 68

This study was aimed to investigate the changes of orexin-A (OXA) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) expression in the hypothalamus of the fasted and high-fat diet fed rats. For the experiments, the male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were used as the model of high-fat diet-induced obesity. The mean loss of body weight (MLBW) did not show the linear pattern during the fasting; from 24 h to 84 h of fastings, the MLBW was not significantly changed. The numbers of OXA-immunoreactive (IR) neurons were decreased at 84 h of fasting compared with those in other five fasting subgroups. The NPY immunoreactivities in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) and the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) observed at 84 h of fasting were higher than that observed at 24 h of fasting. The number of OXA-IR neurons of the LHA (lateral hypothalamic area) in the high-fat (HF) diet fed group was more increased than that of the same area in the normal-fat (NF) diet fed group. The NPY immunoreactivities of the ARC and the SCN were higher in HF group than those observed in the same areas of NF group. Based on these results, it is noteworthy that the decrease of the body weight during the fast was not proportionate to the time-course, implicating a possible adaptation of the body for survival against starvation. The HF diet might activate the OXA and the NPY in the LHA to enhance food intake.
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PMID:Changes in orexin-A and neuropeptide Y expression in the hypothalamus of the fasted and high-fat diet fed rats. 1561 12

Although starvation-induced biochemical and metabolic changes are perceived by the hypothalamus, the adrenal gland plays a key role in the integration of metabolic activity and energy balance, implicating feeding as a major synchronizer of rhythms in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Given that orexins are involved in regulating food intake and activating the HPA axis, we hypothesized that food deprivation, an acute challenge to the systems that regulate energy balance, should elicit changes in orexin receptor signaling at the hypothalamic and adrenal levels. Food deprivation induced orexin type 1 (OX1R) and 2 (OX2R) receptors at mRNA and protein levels in the hypothalamus, in addition to a fivefold increase in prepro-orexin mRNA. Cleaved peptides OR-A and OR-B are also elevated at the protein level. Interestingly, adrenal OX1R and OX2R levels were significantly reduced in food-deprived animals, whereas there was no expression of prepro-orexin in the adrenal gland in either state. Food deprivation exerted a differential effect on OXR-G protein coupling. In the hypothalamus of food deprived rats compared with controls, a significant increase in coupling of orexin receptors to Gq, Gs, and Go was demonstrated, whereas coupling to Gi was relatively less. However, in the adrenal cortex of the food-deprived animal, there was decreased coupling of orexin receptors to Gs, Go, and Gq and increased coupling to Gi. Subsequent second-messenger studies (cAMP/IP3) have supported these findings. Our data indicate that food deprivation has differential effects on orexin receptor expression and their signaling characteristics at the hypothalamic and adrenocortical levels. These findings suggest orexins as potential metabolic regulators within the HPA axis both centrally and peripherally.
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PMID:Food deprivation differentially modulates orexin receptor expression and signaling in rat hypothalamus and adrenal cortex. 1568


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