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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Melanocortin peptides, derived from
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
, appear to play a significant role in appetite and body weight regulation. Expression of the Pomc gene in the central nervous system results in the production of melanocortin peptides, which bind to the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4-R) and inhibit food intake. MC4-R knockout mice exhibit adult-onset obesity, whereas MC4-R agonists suppress food intake in several models of obesity. Recently, Pomc knockout mice were generated and shown to develop
hyperphagia
and obesity with a time-course and severity comparable to MC4-R knockout mice, whereas daily administration of a stable alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone analogue reversed this effect. These data clearly implicate POMC peptides and melanocortin receptors in the pathophysiology of obesity and provide important new tools for their development as therapeutic targets in obesity.
...
PMID:Pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) deficiency and peripheral melanocortins in obesity. 1088 25
Although the rapid increase in the prevalence of obesity in many countries suggests that environmental factors (mainly
overeating
and physical inactivity) play the most important role in the development of overweight, it is very likely that genetic factors also contribute. It appears that one major gene in combination with one or several minor genes constitute the genetic components behind excess accumulation of body fat in most obese individuals. However, monogenic obesity has been described in a few families due to changes in leptin, leptin receptor, prohormone convertase, pro-
opiomelanocortin
or melanocortin-4 receptor. None of the monogenic variants is of great importance for common human obesity; the latter genes are unknown so far. Results from genomic scans suggest that major obesity genes are located on chromosomes 2, 10, 11 and 20. Studies of candidate genes indicate that the minor obesity genes control important functions of adipose tissue, and that structural variance in these genes may alter adipose tissue function in a way that promotes obesity. Such genes are beta 2- and beta 3-adrenoceptors, hormone-sensitive lipase, tumour necrosis factor alpha, uncoupling protein-1, low-density lipoprotein receptor, and peroxisome proliferator activator receptor gamma-2. Some of these genes may promote obesity by gene-gene interactions (for example beta 3-adrenoceptors and uncoupling protein-1) or gene-environment interactions (for example beta 2-adrenoceptors and physical activity). Some are important for obesity only among women (for example beta 2- and beta 3-adrenoceptors, low-density lipoprotein receptor and tumour necrosis factor alpha). Few 'non-adipose' genes have so far shown a firm association to common human obesity, which could suggest that the important genes for the development of excess body fat also control adipose tissue function.
...
PMID:Obesity--a genetic disease of adipose tissue? 1088 86
We investigated the effects of continuous intracerebroventricular infusion of a melanocortin 4 receptor antagonist HS014 (cyclic [AcCys11, D-Nal14, Cys18, Asp-NH2(22)]
beta-MSH
-(11-22)) over 12 days and a subsequent 12-day recovery period on food intake, body weight and copulatory behavior in male rats. The results show that the food intake increased immediately after the start of the infusion of HS014 (0.16 nmol/h) and progressively increased thereafter. No tachyphylaxis was observed. When the infusion of HS014 was terminated, the food-intake levels dropped. The body weights of the rats had increased by 17% by the end of the study, compared with controls. During the recovery period, the body weight decreased towards the levels of the control rats. These results indicate that
overeating
and the subsequent increases in body weight caused by blockage of the melanocortin 4 (MC4) receptor are reversible when the blockage is ended. We also tested the copulatory behavior of vigorous male rats in the presence of female rats in estrous. We registered mount latency, the number of mounts, the intromission latency, the number of intromissions, the ejaculation latency and the post-ejaculatory interval three times during the study and also after acute administration of HS014 and
alpha-MSH
. The sexual behavior of the male rats was not affected. These results indicate that the MC receptors, in particular the MC4 receptor, may not be a major mediator of effects on copulatory behavior in male rats.
...
PMID:Chronic melanocortin 4 receptor blockage causes obesity without influencing sexual behavior in male rats. 1092 31
A high fat diet leads to progressive development of obesity and leptin resistance in C57 mice with a middle stage of peripheral, but not central, leptin resistance. This stage is characterized by increased fat accumulation despite relative hypophagia. At a later stage central leptin resistance ensues along with
hyperphagia
, rapid weight and fat gain. The aim of this study is to characterize the mRNA levels of leptin receptor (LR), neuropeptide Y (NPY) and
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
in high fat (HFF) and low fat (LFF) fed groups of mice. The hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (Arc) was investigated, as was the choroid plexus (ChP) in the case of the leptin receptor. No differences between groups were seen in LR, NPY or POMC mRNA levels after 1 week of feeding. After 8 and 19 weeks, the HFF mice, compared to LFF controls, demonstrated a +45% (P<0. 003) and +84% (P<0.0001) increase in the ratio of visceral fat to body weight and +223% (P<0.0001) and +468% (P<0.0001) elevation in plasma leptin levels, respectively. At 8 weeks, LR mRNA expression showed a +98% (P<0.016) and +66% (P<0.0001) increase in ChP and Arc, respectively, while Arc NPY mRNA showed down-regulation by -45% (P<0. 006). Arc POMC mRNA showed no significant changes between groups at 8 weeks. However, after long-term (19 weeks) feeding, the HFF mice displayed significantly -26% (P<0.039) and -33% (P<0.0015) reduced LR mRNA in the ChP and Arc, respectively, with Arc POMC and NPY mRNAs down by -55% (P<0.004) and -32% (P<0.009), respectively. The present results suggest that in the middle stage of development of high fat-induced obesity, when central leptin sensitivity is maintained, the increased leptin receptor expression may play a role to defend against obesity which is overwhelmed as central leptin insensitivity develops. In this later stage the down-regulation of the POMC system may be important in the final breakdown of weight homeostasis.
...
PMID:Leptin receptor, NPY, POMC mRNA expression in the diet-induced obese mouse brain. 1096 2
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
The injection of a melanocortin peptide or of melanocortin peptide analogues into the cerebrospinal fluid or into the ventromedial hypothalamus in nanomolar or subnanomolar doses induces a long-lasting inhibition of food intake. The effect keeps significant for up to 9 h and has been observed in all animal species so far tested, the most susceptible being the rabbit. The anorectic effect of these peptides is a primary one, not secondary to the shift towards other components of the complex melanocortin-induced behavioral syndrome, in particular grooming. The site of action is in the brain, and the effect is not adrenal-mediated because it is fully exhibited also by adrenalectomized animals. It is a very strong effect, because the degree of feeding inhibition is not reduced in conditions of hunger, either induced by 24 h starvation, or by insulin-induced hypoglycemia, or by stimulation of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), noradrenergic or opioid systems. The microstructural analysis of feeding behavior suggests that melanocortins act as satiety-inducing agents, because they do not significantly modify the latencies to start eating, but shorten the latencies to stop eating. The mechanism of action involves the activation of melanocortin MC(4) receptors, because selective melanocortin MC(4) receptor antagonists inhibit the anorectic effect of melanocortins, while inducing per se a strong stimulation of food intake and a significant increase in body weight. Melanocortins seem to play an important role in stress-induced anorexia, because such condition, in rats, is significantly attenuated by the blockage of melanocortin MC(4) receptors; such a role is not secondary to an increased release of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), because, on the other hand, the CRF-induced anorexia is not affected at all by the blockage of melanocortin MC(4) receptors. The physiological meaning of the feeding inhibitory effect of melanocortins, and, by consequence, the physiological role of melanocortins in the complex machinery responsible for body weight homeostasis, is testified by the
hyperphagia
/obesity syndromes caused by mutations in the
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
gene, or in the melanocortin MC(4) receptor gene, or in the agouti locus. Finally, recent evidences suggest that melanocortins could be involved in mediating the effects of leptin, and in controlling the expression of neuropeptide Y (NPY).
...
PMID:Role of melanocortins in the central control of feeding. 1103 11
During lactation, hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti related protein (AGRP) mRNA are increased, while
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
mRNA is decreased. Serum leptin levels are also decreased during lactation. These changes may underlie the large increases of both food and water intake that occur in concert with milk production. However, additional hypothalamic substances, such as the novel peptide, orexin, may be involved. In addition, in the presence of chronically suppressed levels of serum leptin, there may be a change in leptin receptor expression in the hypothalamus. The objectives of the present study were to determine if orexin and leptin receptor mRNA levels were changed during lactation. Rats were studied on dioestrus of the oestrous cycle or on day 10 postpartum (the lactating animals were suckling eight pups). Orexin mRNA levels in the lateral hypothalamus did not differ between dioestrus and lactation. There was a significant increase in leptin receptor mRNA levels in the supraoptic nucleus during lactation compared to dioestrus. Furthermore, leptin receptor protein, as determined by immunocytochemistry, was colocalized in virtually all vasopressin and oxytocin cells in the supraoptic nucleus. Lactating animals exhibited a decrease in leptin receptor mRNA in the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus whereas no change was apparent in other hypothalamic areas compared to the dioestrus animals. These results demonstrate that changes in orexin do not appear to contribute to the increase in food intake during lactation. It is likely that the increases in NPY and ARGP, coupled with the decrease in POMC, are primarily responsible for sustaining the chronic
hyperphagia
of lactation. The changes observed in leptin receptor expression in the hypothalamus, along with the suppression of serum leptin levels, also suggest that the leptin signalling system may play a significant role in the regulation of food and water intake during lactation.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of leptin receptor but not orexin in the hypothalamus of the lactating rat. 1106 23
Corticotropin
releasing hormone (CRH) acts on the central nervous system to alter energy balance and influence both food intake and sympathetically-mediated thermogenesis. CRH is also reported to inhibit food intake in several models of
hyperphagia
including neuropeptide Y (NPY)-induced eating. The recently identified CRH-related peptide, urocortin (UCN), also binds with high affinity to CRH receptor subtypes and decreases food intake in food-deprived and non-deprived rats. The present experiment characterized further the feeding and metabolic effects of UCN by examining its impact after direct injections into the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus. In feeding tests (n=8), UCN (50-200 pmol) was injected into the PVN at the onset of the dark cycle and food intake was measured 1, 2 and 4 h postinjection. In separate rats (n=8), the metabolic effects of UCN were monitored using an open circuit calorimeter which measured oxygen consumption (V(O2)) and carbon dioxide production (V(CO2)). Respiratory quotient (RQ) was calculated as V(CO2)/V(O2). UCN suppressed feeding at all times studied and reliably decreased RQ within 30 min of infusion. Additional work examined the effect of UCN (50-100 pmol) pretreatment on the feeding and metabolic effects of NPY. NPY, injected at the start of the dark period, reliably increased 2 h food intake. This effect was blocked by PVN UCN administration. Similarly, UCN blocked the increase in RQ elicited by NPY alone. These results suggest that UCN-sensitive mechanisms within the PVN may modulate food intake and energy substrate utilization, possibly through an interaction with hypothalamic NPY.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus injections of urocortin alter food intake and respiratory quotient. 1159 9
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
The hypothalamus regulates many aspects of energy homeostasis, adjusting both the drive to eat and the expenditure of energy in response to a wide range of nutritional and other signals. It is becoming clear that various neural circuits operate to different degrees and probably serve specific functions under particular conditions of altered feeding behaviour. This review will discuss this functional diversity by illustrating hypothalamic neurones that express neuropeptide Y (NPY), the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4-R) and the orexins. NPY neurones in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) release NPY, a powerful inducer of feeding and obesity, in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA). ARC-NPY neurones are inhibited by leptin and insulin and become overactive when levels of these hormones fall during undernutrition. They may function physiologically to protect against starvation. With disruption of the inhibitory leptin signals due to gene mutations, the NPY neurones are overactive, which contributes to
hyperphagia
and obesity in the ob/ob and db/db mice and fa/fa Zucker rat. The MC4-R is activated by
alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone
[
alpha-MSH
; a cleavage product of
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
, which is expressed in the other ARC neurones] and inhibits feeding. This effect is antagonised by agouti gene-related peptide (AGRP), which is coexpressed by the ARC-NPY neurones only. Activation of MC4-R, possibly mediated by blockade of AGRP release, appears to restrain
overeating
of a palatable diet. This response may be programmed by a transient rise in leptin soon after presentation of palatable food, and rats that fail to do this will overeat and become obese. Orexin-A and -B (corresponding to hypocretins 1 and 2) are expressed in specific LHA neurones. These have extensive reciprocal connections with many areas involved in appetite control, including the nucleus of the solitary tracts (NTS), which relays vagal afferent satiety signals from the viscera. Orexin neurones also have close anatomical connections with LHA glucose-sensitive neurones. Orexin-A induces acute feeding but does not cause obesity. Orexin neurones are stimulated by hypoglycaemia partly via the NTS and inhibited by food ingestion. These neurones may therefore be involved in the severe
hyperphagia
of hypoglycaemia and short-term control of feeding.
...
PMID:The hypothalamus and the control of energy homeostasis: different circuits, different purposes. 1179 Apr 31
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