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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The fatty acid synthase inhibitor, C75, acts centrally to reduce food intake and body weight in mice. Here we report the effects of C75 on the expression of key orexigenic [neuropeptide Y (NPY), agouti-related protein (AgRP), and
melanin-concentrating hormone
] and anorexigenic [
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
and cocaine-amphetamine-related transcript (CART)] neuropeptide messages in the hypothalami of lean and obese (ob/ob) mice. In lean mice, C75 rapidly and almost completely blocked food intake and prevented fasting-induced up-regulation of hypothalamic AgRP and NPY mRNAs, as well as down-regulation of CART and POMC mRNAs. Thus, in lean mice C75 seems to interrupt the fasting-induced signals that activate expression of NPY and AgRP and suppression of POMC and CART. In obese mice, C75 rapidly suppressed food intake, reduced body weight, and normalized obesity-associated hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia. Like its effect in lean mice, C75 prevented the fasting-induced increase of hypothalamic NPY and AgRP mRNAs in obese mice, but had no effect on the expression of POMC and CART mRNAs. The suppressive effect of C75 on food intake in lean mice seems to be mediated both by NPY/AgRP and POMC/CART neurons, whereas in obese mice the effect seems to be mediated primarily by NPY/AgRP neurons. In both lean and obese mice, C75 markedly increased expression of
melanin-concentrating hormone
and its receptor in the hypothalamus.
...
PMID:Effect of a fatty acid synthase inhibitor on food intake and expression of hypothalamic neuropeptides. 1175 83
Leptin affects body weight by decreasing food intake, activating the sympathetic nervous system and regulating neuroendocrine function. This type of regulation is a hallmark of hypothalamic control, which typically integrates autonomic, endocrine and behavioral responses. We have performed a series of experiments investigating hypothalamic pathways underlying these actions of leptin. We found that leptin activates neurons that coexpress
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) mRNA. These neurons innervate several sites, including sympathetic preganglionic neurons in the spinal cord, neurons in the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVH), and
melanin-concentrating hormone
and orexin neurons in the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA). Following leptin administration, POMC neurons express both Fos and suppressor of cytokine signalling-3 (SOCS-3) mRNA. In contrast, leptin induced SOCS-3 expression in neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons but not Fos, suggesting that leptin acts differentially on NPY and POMC cells. We also investigated potential downstream targets of leptin responsive NPY and POMC neurons by assessing the distribution of the melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4-R) mRNA and Y1 and Y5 NPY receptor mRNA in chemically defined neurons. We found dense MC4-R mRNA expression in several sites including the PVH and LHA. Using dual-label in situ hybridization we found that MC4-R mRNA is coexpressed in PVH cells expressing pro-TRH mRNA. We also found Y1 and Y5 NPY receptor mRNA in the PVH in patterns very similar to that of MC4R, suggesting that these receptors may be coexpressed on at least some PVH neurons. These results provide a neuroanatomic framework explaining the endocrine, autonomic and behavioral effects of leptin.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic pathways underlying the endocrine, autonomic, and behavioral effects of leptin. 1184 Feb 21
The neuropeptides orexin-A and orexin-B are produced in neurons of the lateral hypothalamic area and have been implicated to be involved in the regulation of food/water intake and sleep-wake control. The orexins act at two different G-protein-coupled orexin receptors (OX-R1 and OX-R2) that are derived from separate genes and expressed differentially throughout the central nervous system. In the present study, we have used a polyclonal antipeptide antiserum to analyse in detail the distribution of OX-R1-immunoreactive neurons in the rat hypothalamus. In order to identify the chemical mediators of orexin action in the hypothalamus, the OX-R1-containing neurons were characterized with regard to the content of peptides shown previously to affect ingestive and drinking behaviour. Neurons containing OX-R1 immunoreactivity were widely distributed in the hypothalamus with cell bodies located in the suprachiasmatic, periventricular, paraventricular (both magno- and parvocellular division), supraoptic, arcuate, ventromedial, dorsomedial and tuberomammillary nuclei and the lateral hypothalamic area. In magnocellular neurons of the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei, OX-R1 immunoreactivity was seen in both vasopressin- and oxytocin-containing neurons. OX-R1 immunoreactivity was demonstrated in vasopressin and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) neurons of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, in somatostatin neurons of the periventricular nucleus and in
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) neurons of the parvocellular paraventricular nucleus. In the arcuate nucleus, OX-R1 immunoreactivity was present in neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related peptide (AGRP) neurons of the ventromedial part as well as in proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) neurons of the ventrolateral division. In the lateral hypothalamic area, OX-R1 immunoreactivity was demonstrated in
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
)- and orexin-containing neurons. In the hypothalamic tuberomammillary nucleus, OX-R1-immunoreactivity was shown in many histamine-containing neurons. The results support the idea that orexins have important actions on hypothalamic neurons that control food intake and fluid balance, but also that orexins may regulate other neuroendocrine systems.
...
PMID:Orexin receptor-1 (OX-R1) immunoreactivity in chemically identified neurons of the hypothalamus: focus on orexin targets involved in control of food and water intake. 1184 98
1. We wished to further study the behavioral effects of alpha-melanotropin (
alpha-MSH
),
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
), and neuropeptide glutamine-isoleucine (NEI). 2. To this effect we administered
alpha-MSH
,
MCH
, and NEI in the ventral tegmental area of the rat, a structure where these neuropeptides are highly concentrated. To further elucidate the biochemical mechanisms of the behavioral effect of these neuropeptides, we determined the degree of grooming behavior and the levels of catecholamines. after neuropeptide administration. 3. We preselected those animals responding to the central injection of
alpha-MSH
with excessive grooming behavior. We administered the neuropeptides at the dose of 1 microg/0.5 microL, in each side of the ventral tegmental area, bilaterally. We studied grooming behavior, locomotor activity, and total behavior scores, 30 and 65 min after administration of the peptides. 4. Three groups of animals were decapitated immediately after the injection of the neuropeptides, and 30 or 65 min after injection. We measured dopamine (DA), noradrenaline (NA), and the dopac/dopamine ratio (DOPAC/DA) to determine steady state levels of catecholamines and an indirect measure of DA release and metabolism, respectively. 5. Injections of
alpha-MSH
produced significant elevations in grooming behavior, locomotor activity, and total behavior scores, both 30 and 65 min after peptide administration. This was correlated with significant decreases in DA content, increases in DOPAC content, and increases in the DOPAC/DA ratio. In the caudate putamen, changes in catecholamines occurred both at 30 and 65 min after injection. In the nucleus accumbens, changes were present at 65 min after injection. Conversely, there were no alterations in NA content, either in the caudate putamen or in the nucleus accumbens, at any time after the injection. 6. Injections of NEI resulted in significant elevations in grooming behavior, locomotor activity, and total behavior scores, both 30 and 65 min after peptide administration. This was correlated with increased DOPAC/DA ratio in the nucleus caudatus but not in the nucleus accumbens. Conversely, NEI produced increased NA concentrations in the nucleus accumbens, but not in the nucleus caudatus. 7. Injections of
MCH
did not produce significant changes in behavior or significant changes in nucleus caudatus or nucleus accumbens catecholamines. 8. Our results indicate (a) There is a correlation with alterations in behavior as induced for the neuropeptides injected here, and changes in extrapyramidal catecholamines. (b) There is a correlation between alterations in behavior and increases in DOPAC/DA ratio in the nucleus caudatus. (c) There is a correlation between alterations in behavior and alterations in catecholamines in the nucleus accumbens. In the nucleus accumbens, DOPAC/DA ratio is changed after
alpha-MSH
, and NA ratio is changed after NEI injection. (d) Absence of alterations in extrapyramidal catecholamines, and in particular in catecholamines in the nucleus accumbens, correlates with absence of behavioral alterations after neuropeptide administration to the ventral tegmental area. 9. In conclusion, the behavioral effect of exogenous administration of neuropeptides in the ventral tegmental area is peptide-specific, and is probably associated with alterations in catecholamine metabolism and release in the nucleus caudatus and the nucleus accumbens. Both
alpha-MSH
and NEI seem to stimulate the nigrostriatal DA system. While
alpha-MSH
appears to stimulate the mesolimbic DA system as well, NEI may exert its actions not through the DA, but through the NA mesolimbic system. The precise contribution of DA and NA, and the relative role of the nucleus caudatus and nucleus accumbens in these behaviors remain to be elucidated.
...
PMID:Correlation of increased grooming behavior and motor activity with alterations in nigrostriatal and mesolimbic catecholamines after alpha-melanotropin and neuropeptide glutamine-isoleucine injection in the rat ventral tegmental area. 1186 Jan 89
The biology of leptin has been studied most extensively in rodents and in humans. Leptin is involved in the regulation of food intake, energy homeostasis and immunity. Leptin is primarily produced in white adipose tissue and acts via a family of membrane bound receptors, including an isoform with a long intracellular domain (OB-Rb), and many isoforms with short intracellular domains (Ob-Rs). OB-Rb is predominantly expressed in the hypothalamic regions involved in the regulation of food intake and energy homeostasis. The other isoforms are distributed ubiquitously and are found in most peripheral tissues in far greater abundance than OB-Rb. The effects of leptin on food intake and energy homeostasis are central and are mediated via a network of orexigenic neuropeptides (neuropeptide Y, galanin, galanin-like peptide,
melanin-concentrating hormone
, orexins, agouti-related peptide) and anorexigenic neuropeptides (
corticotropin
-releasing hormone, pro-
opiomelanocortin
, alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript). In addition, leptin acts directly on immune cells to stimulate hematopoesis, T-cell immunity, phagocytosis, cytokine production, and to attenuate susceptibility to infectious insults. Emerging data in ruminants suggest that leptin is dynamically regulated by many factors and physiological states. Thus, leptin is secreted in a pulsatile fashion, but without a marked diurnal rhythm. A positive relationship between adiposity and plasma leptin concentration exists in growing and lactating ruminants. The concentration of plasma leptin increases during pregnancy, starts to decline 1--2 wk before parturition, and reaches a nadir in early lactation. The reduction of plasma leptin at parturition is likely to promote centrally mediated adaptations required in periods of energy deficit, but could have negative effects on immune cell function. Future research is needed in ruminants to address the roles played by leptin and the central nervous system in orchestrating metabolism during the periparturient period and during infectious diseases.
...
PMID:Leptin and the regulation of food intake, energy homeostasis and immunity with special focus on periparturient ruminants. 1187 19
The identification of leptin and a range of novel anorectic and orexigenic peptides has focussed attention on the neural circuitry involved in the genesis of food intake and the reflex control of thermogenesis. Here, the neurotropic virus pseudorabies has been utilised in conjunction with the immunocytochemical localisation of a variety of neuroactive peptides and receptors to better define the pathways in the rat hypothalamus directed polysynaptically to the major thermogenic endpoint, brown adipose tissue. Infected neurones were detected initially in the stellate ganglion, then in the spinal cord followed by the appearance of third-order premotor neurones in the brainstem and hypothalamus. Within the hypothalamus these were present in the paraventricular nucleus, lateral hypothalamus, perifornical region, and retrochiasmatic nucleus. At slightly longer survival times virus-infected neurones appeared in the arcuate nucleus and dorsomedial hypothalamus. Neurones in the retrochiasmatic nucleus and in the adjacent lateral arcuate nucleus which project to the brown adipose tissue express cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript, pro-
opiomelanocortin
and leptin receptors. Neurones in the lateral hypothalamus, a site traditionally associated with the promotion of feeding, project to brown adipose tissue and large numbers of these contained
melanin-concentrating hormone
and orexin A and B. These data provide part of an anatomical framework which subserves the regulation of energy expenditure.
...
PMID:The neurochemical characterisation of hypothalamic pathways projecting polysynaptically to brown adipose tissue in the rat. 1190 90
Loss of appetite and weight are frequently observed at altitudes above 5000 m. However, the pathophysiology behind changes in body composition at extreme altitude is still not fully understood. Proper acclimatization to altitude and high caloric intake minimizes, but can not completely prevent significant weight loss under the influence of hypobaric hypoxia. The discovery of leptin in 1994 has initiated a new research area investigating molecular networks that connect peripheral organs with the central nervous system to sense and regulate energy intake as well as energy expenditure. Since then, a whole microcosm of new hormones, neurotransmitters and receptors has been discovered and studied with respect to body weight control. Those agents include neuropeptide Y (NPY), agouti-related protein (AGRP), melanocortin receptors (MC-R), cocaine-amphetamine regulated transcript (CART),
pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
, orexin A and B (hypocretins),
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
) and ghrelin (endogenous ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor). This overview will introduce the current concepts of the molecular control of energy homeostasis and attempt to reexamine the effects of altitude on appetite and body composition in light of these concepts. An overview of studies on changes of appetite and body composition at high altitude will be followed by the presentation of recent data on changes of endocrine parameters at hypobaric hypoxia that could be involved in the pathophysiology of weight loss.
...
PMID:Weight loss at high altitude. 1195 Jan 42
A chronic minor imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure may lead to obesity. Both lean and obese subjects eventually reach energy balance and their body weight regulation implies that the adipose tissue mass is "sensed", leading to appropriate responses of energy intake and energy expenditure. The cloning of the ob gene and the identification of its encoded protein, leptin, have provided a system signaling the amount of adipose energy stores to the brain. Leptin, a hormone secreted by fat cells, acts in rodents via hypothalamic receptors to inhibit feeding and increase thermogenesis. A feedback regulatory loop with three distinct steps has been identified: (1) a sensor (leptin production by adipose cells) monitors the size of the adipose tissue mass; (2) hypothalamic centers receive and integrate the intensity of the leptin signal through leptin receptors (LRb); (3) effector systems, including the sympathetic nervous system, control the two main determinants of energy balance-energy intake and energy expenditure. While this feedback regulatory loop is well established in rodents, there are many unsolved questions about its applicability to body weight regulation in humans. The rate of leptin production is related to adiposity, but a large portion of the interindividual variability in plasma leptin concentration is independent of body fatness. Gender is an important factor determining plasma leptin, with women having markedly higher leptin concentrations than men for any given degree of fat mass. The ob mRNA expression is also upregulated by glucocorticoids, whereas stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system results in its inhibition. Furthermore, leptin is not a satiety factor in humans because changes in food intake do not induce short-term increases in plasma leptin levels. After its binding to LRb in the hypothalamus, leptin stimulates a specific signaling cascade that results in the inhibition of several orexigenic neuropeptides, while stimulating several anorexigenic peptides. The orexigenic neuropeptides that are downregulated by leptin are NPY (neuropeptide Y),
MCH
(
melanin-concentrating hormone
), orexins, and AGRP (agouti-related peptide). The anorexigenic neuropeptides that are upregulated by leptin are
alpha-MSH
(
alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone
), which acts on MC4R (melanocortin-4 receptor); CART (cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript); and CRH (
corticotropin
-releasing-hormone). Obese humans have high plasma leptin concentrations related to the size of adipose tissue, but this elevated leptin signal does not induce the expected responses (i.e., a reduction in food intake and an increase in energy expenditure). This suggests that obese humans are resistant to the effects of endogenous leptin. This resistance is also shown by the lack of effect of exogenous leptin administration to induce weight loss in obese patients. The mechanisms that may account for leptin resistance in human obesity include a limitation of the blood-brain-barrier transport system for leptin and an inhibition of the leptin signaling pathways in leptin-responsive hypothalamic neurons. During periods of energy deficit, the fall in leptin plasma levels exceeds the rate at which fat stores are decreased. Reduction of the leptin signal induces several neuroendocrine responses that tend to limit weight loss, such as hunger, food-seeking behavior, and suppression of plasma thyroid hormone levels. Conversely, it is unlikely that leptin has evolved to prevent obesity when plenty of palatable foods are available because the elevated plasma leptin levels resulting from the increased adipose tissue mass do not prevent the development of obesity. In conclusion, in humans, the leptin signaling system appears to be mainly involved in maintenance of adequate energy stores for survival during periods of energy deficit. Its role in the etiology of human obesity is only demonstrated in the very rare situations of absence of the leptin signal (mutations of the leptin gene or of the leptin receptor gene), which produces an internal perception of starvation and results in a chronic stimulation of excessive food intake.
...
PMID:Leptin signaling, adiposity, and energy balance. 1207 65
In this study, we have demonstrated the presence of
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
) and melanin-concentrating hormone receptor (MCHR1) transcripts in human skin. Sequence analysis confirmed that the transcripts of both genes were identical to those previously found in human brain. In culture, endothelial cells showed pro-
MCH
expression whereas no signal was found in keratinocytes, melanocytes, and fibroblasts. MCHR1 expression was restricted to melanocytes and melanoma cells. Stimulation of cultured human melanocytes with
MCH
reduced the
alpha-MSH
-induced increase in cAMP production. Furthermore, the melanogenic actions of
alpha-MSH
were inhibited by
MCH
. We propose that the
MCH
/MCHR1 signalling system is present in human skin and may have a role with the melanocortins in regulating the melanocyte.
...
PMID:Melanin-concentrating hormone and its receptor are expressed and functional in human skin. 1217 38
Melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
) is a potent orexigenic neuropeptide and a physiological antagonist of
alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone
(
alpha-MSH
) in the brain as well as at peripheral sites, including the pigmentary systems of specific vertebrates. Two receptor subtypes for
MCH
, MCH-R1 and MCH-R2, have been cloned, but other receptor subtypes are likely to exist. Based on our own data and the current literature, we have compared the expression of different receptors for
MCH
in various mammalian cell lines and tissues. Summarizing all data currently available, we conclude that the two cloned
MCH
receptors, MCH-R1 and MCH-R2, exhibit differences in their expression pattern, although MCH-R1 is generally colocalized in all tissues where MCH-R2 expression is found. It appears that MCH-R1 is more abundant and has a wider distribution pattern than MCH-R2. Other hypothetical
MCH
-R subtypes may be expressed in specific tissues, e.g., in the pigment cell system.
...
PMID:Expression of receptors for melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) in different tissues and cell lines. 1250 38
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