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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (oxytocin)
15,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intracerebroventricular administration of oxytocin (OT) and an OT agonist significantly decreased food intake in a dose-related manner in fasted rats. Central administration of an OT antagonist by itself (up to doses of 8 nmol) did not potentiate deprivation-induced food intake, but pretreatment with the OT receptor antagonist prevented the expected inhibition of food intake produced by OT and the OT agonist. Once-daily ICV injections of OT led to the development of tolerance to the inhibitory effects on food intake by the third day of treatment, but daily pretreatment with the OT antagonist prevented the development of this tolerance. In addition to causing decreased food intake, ICV administration of OT significantly increased grooming behavior but produced no dyskinesias. The inhibitory effect of OT on food intake was characterized by decreased amounts of food intake but a normal pattern of ingestion. The anorexia produced was central in nature and was not associated with altered plasma levels of hormones involved in caloric homeostasis or with changes in blood glucose. The OT agonist had relatively little effect on water intake when given in doses that significantly inhibited food intake. These results support the hypothesis that specific OT receptors within the central nervous system participate in the inhibition of feeding under certain conditions in rats.
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PMID:Oxytocin and an oxytocin agonist administered centrally decrease food intake in rats. 164 95

The inhibition of food intake in rats that results from various anorexigenic treatments is frequently associated with pituitary secretion of oxytocin (OT), but is not caused by circulating OT. We, therefore, evaluated the potential role of brain OT in mediating anorexia induced in rats by systemic administration of cholecystokinin (CCK), hypertonic saline (HS), or lithium chloride (LiCl), treatments that are known to stimulate pituitary OT secretion as well as to inhibit food intake. Food intake was analyzed in 22-h food-deprived rats pretreated with icv injections of either artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) or 9 nmol of an OT receptor antagonist, [d(CH2)5, Tyr(OMe)2,Orn8]vasotocin (OVT), which was the dose found to be most effective to antagonize the anorexia induced by CCK and HS. Pretreatment with the OT receptor antagonist icv significantly blunted the anorexigenic effect of each agent. After CCK (10 micrograms/kg, ip), food intake increased from 28 +/- 5% of basal intake after a CSF icv to 48 +/- 8% after OVT icv (P less than 0.01); after HS (2 ml 2 M NaCl, ip), food intake increased from 9 +/- 4% of basal intake after aCSF icv to 43 +/- 7% after OVT icv (P less than 0.01); and after LiCl (1.125 mmol/kg, ip), food intake increased from 55 +/- 4% of basal intake after a CSF icv to 80 +/- 9% after OVT icv (P less than 0.01). These data support the hypothesis that pituitary secretion of OT after anorexigenic treatments in rats is associated with coactivation of centrally projecting brain OT pathways, some of which are causally related to the induced inhibition of food intake.
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PMID:Brain oxytocin receptor antagonism blunts the effects of anorexigenic treatments in rats: evidence for central oxytocin inhibition of food intake. 164 46

Plasma oxytocin (OT) levels were measured before and after stimulation with estrogens (1 mg ethynylestradiol orally) or with insulin (0.15 IU/kg)-induced hypoglycemia in seven underweight women with anorexia nervosa, eight normal weight bulimic women, and nine normal controls. Anorectic patients were amenorrhoic; they were tested at their first hospitalization (first tests) and again 8 to 9 weeks later (second tests) when they were eating normally, but were still at a low weight. In addition, anorectic women were tested 16 to 17 weeks after the first test (third tests), when their weight was restored to normal. Normal and bulimic women were tested on the fourth days of normal menstrual cycles. Insulin induced similar hypoglycemic responses in all groups. At each time point of the estrogen tests, plasma estrogen levels were similar in bulimic and normal women, whereas they were significantly lower in anorectic subjects. There were no differences in the basal levels of OT among groups. Both insulin-induced hypoglycemia and estrogen treatment produced striking OT increments in bulimic and control women, without significant differences between groups. During the first tests, no significant increase in plasma OT levels was observed in underweight anorectic women in response to both releasing stimuli. After partial weight recovery, the anorectic women showed a slight, but significant, increase in the OT responses to both insulin-induced hypoglycemia and estrogen administration. Both hypoglycemia- and estrogen-induced OT increases observed during the second tests were significantly lower in underweight anorectic patients than in normal controls. Anorectic subjects regained normal OT responsiveness to both stimuli after complete weight recovery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of estrogen or insulin-induced hypoglycemia on plasma oxytocin levels in bulimia and anorexia nervosa. 194 52

Oxytocin is a hypothalamic neuropeptide with both centrally and peripherally directed pathways. Data from experimental animals indicate that oxytocin impairs consolidation of aversively conditioned behaviors and is released after feeding or experimental gastric distension. The authors report that the mean CSF oxytocin level of five underweight women with restricting anorexia, but not 12 underweight bulimic anorexic women or 35 normal-weight women with bulimia nervosa, was significantly lower than the level of 11 control subjects. Restricting anorexic patients' low CSF oxytocin levels may reflect their persistently low food intake, and this behavior may exacerbate their tendency for perseverative preoccupation with adverse consequences of food intake.
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PMID:CSF oxytocin in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa: clinical and pathophysiologic considerations. 235 73

Hydrallantois was detected in a pregnant ewe by physical examination and ultrasonographic evaluation. Clinical signs of disease included acute progressive bilateral abdominal distention, anorexia, and recumbency. Right-flank celiotomy and cesarean section were used to alleviate the condition. Post-operatively, in addition to supportive treatment, oxytocin and fenprostalene (a long-acting prostaglandin) were administered to decrease the likelihood or severity of hydrallantoic sequelae.
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PMID:Hydrallantois in a ewe. 268 39

The immune system does not function in isolation from either nervous or endocrine system. Recent advances in biology have made it clear that there are many connections between immune system and hypothalamo-pituitary axis. Among them, relationship of cytokines to hypothalamus is of great interest. We reviewed functions of the cytokines such as interleukin, interferon and tumour necrosis factor. For example, IL-1 releases ACTH from the hypophysis being mediated by corticotropin releasing hormone in the hypothalamus. ACTH shows inhibitory effect on the immune system. Interferons, as well as interleukins bring fever and anorexia via opioid receptors in the hypothalamus. There are some evidences which show effect of IL-1 on the posterior hypophysis which secretes vasopressin and oxytocin. There are, however, many unknown mechanisms in this field. The resolution of the specific interactions between the immune system and the hypothalamo-pituitary axis is subject to further investigations.
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PMID:[Immune system and hypophysis]. 825 22

Centrally-mediated responses to plasma hyperosmolality include compensatory drinking and pituitary secretion of vasopressin and oxytocin in both adult and neonatal rats. However, the anorexia that is produced by plasma hyperosmolality in adult rats is not evident in neonates, perhaps due to functional immaturity of osmoresponsive hindbrain circuits. To examine this possibility, the present study compared treatment-induced brain expression of the immediate-early gene product c-Fos as a marker of neural activation in adult and two-day-old rats after subcutaneous injection of 2 M NaCl (0.1 ml/10 g body weight). This treatment produced marked hypernatremia in adult and two-day-old rats without altering plasma volume. Several brain regions (including components of the lamina terminalis, the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus, and the area postrema) were activated to express c-Fos similarly in adult and two-day-old rats after 2 M NaCl injection, consistent with previous reports implicating a subset of these regions in osmotically-stimulated drinking and neurohypophyseal secretion. In contrast, other areas of the brain that were activated to express c-Fos in adult rats after 2 M NaCl injection were not activated in neonates: these areas included the central nucleus of the amygdala, the parabrachial nucleus and catecholamine cell groups within the caudal medulla. This study demonstrates that certain brain regions that are osmoresponsive in adult rats (as defined by induced c-Fos expression) are not osmoresponsive in two-day-old rats. When considered in the context of known differences between the osmoregulatory capacities of adult and neonatal rats, our results are consistent with the idea that osmoresponsive forebrain centres are primarily involved in osmotically-stimulated compensatory drinking and neurohypophyseal secretion, whereas osmoresponsive regions of the hindbrain are important for concomitant inhibition of feeding and gastric emptying.
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PMID:Central c-Fos expression in neonatal and adult rats after subcutaneous injection of hypertonic saline. 921 75

The anorexic effects of phenylpropanolamine (PPA) have been attributed to activation by PPA of alpha 1-adrenoceptors within rat hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). The PVN, however, is a nexus for a number of ascending and descending fibers systems that release transmitters and modulators known to inhibit appetite. The focus of the present study was to assess the possibility that oxytocin activity might play a role in the anorexic action of PPA. The present study therefore examined the effects of systemic administration of the oxytocin antagonist L-366,948 on PPA-induced anorexia. Adult male rats (n = 10 per group) were pretreated (i.p.) with either 0, 1, or 2 mg/kg L-366,948 15 min prior to treatment injections (i.p.) of either 0, 5, 10 and 15 mg/kg PPA. Food and water intakes were recorded for a 30 min period (1600 h) starting 30 min after the treatment injection. Rats pretreated with vehicle and then treated with PPA exhibited a dose-dependent suppression of feeding with a maximal effect evident at 15 mg/kg PPA. Pretreatment with 1 or 2 mg/kg L-366,948 alone did not alter feeding nor did these doses alter the anorexia induced by PPA. These results suggest that direct or indirect oxytocin activity is not a factor in the anorexic action of PPA, a finding that further strengthens the notion that PPA inhibits food intake via activation of alpha 1-adrenoceptors.
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PMID:Assessment of the role of oxytocin receptors in phenylpropanolamine-induced anorexia in rats. 925 4

The aim of this study was to examine whether anorexia and bulimia nervosa are accompanied by lower serum activity of prolyl endopeptidase (PEP;EC 3.4.21.26; post-proline cleaving enzyme), a cytosolic endopeptidase which cleaves peptide bonds on the carboxyl side of proline in proteins of relatively small molecular mass. Substrates of PEP are, amongst others, neuroactive peptides, such as arginine vasopressin, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, thyrotropin releasing hormone,alpha-melanocyte secreting hormone, substance P, oxytocin, bradykinin, neurotensin and angiotensin (Ag) I and II. Serum PEP activity was measured in the serum of 18 normal women, 21 anorexia nervosa and 21 bulimia nervosa women by means of a fluoremetric method. The Bulimic Investigatory Test, Edinburgh (BITE), the Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI) and the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) were scored. Serum PEP activity was significantly lower in patients with bulimia nervosa and anorexia nervosa, irrespective of the restricted or binging subtype, than in normal controls. There were significant and inverse correlations between serum PEP activity and the HDRS and BITE. In anorectic patients, but not in normal or bulimic patients, there was a significant correlation between serum PEP and body mass index. In bulimic patients, but not in normal or anorectic patients, there was a significant correlation between serum PEP and duration of illness. It is concluded that lowered serum PEP activity takes part in the pathophysiology of anorexia and bulimia nervosa. It is hypothesized that a combined dysregulation of PEP and neuroactive peptides, which are substrates of PEP, could be an integral component of eating disorders.
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PMID:Lower serum activity of prolyl endopeptidase in anorexia and bulimia nervosa. 1107 Mar 31

The present study examined possible interactions between central glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and oxytocin (OT) neural systems by determining whether blockade of GLP-1 receptors attenuates OT-induced anorexia and vice versa. Male rats were acclimated to daily 4-h food access. In the first experiment, rats were infused centrally with GLP-1 receptor antagonist or vehicle, followed by an anorexigenic dose of synthetic OT. Access to food began 20 min later. Cumulative food intake was measured every 30 min for 4 h. In the second experiment, rats were infused with OT receptor blocker or vehicle, followed by synthetic GLP-1 [(7-36) amide]. Subsequent food intake was monitored as before. The anorexigenic effect of OT was eliminated in rats pretreated with the GLP-1 receptor antagonist. Conversely, GLP-1-induced anorexia was not affected by blockade of OT receptors. In a separate immunocytochemical study, OT-positive terminals were found closely apposed to GLP-1-positive perikarya, and central infusion of OT activated c-Fos expression in GLP-1 neurons. These findings implicate endogenous GLP-1 receptor signaling as an important downstream mediator of anorexia in rats after activation of central OT neural pathways.
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PMID:GLP-1 receptor signaling contributes to anorexigenic effect of centrally administered oxytocin in rats. 1206 35


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