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Adrenalectomy reduces neuropeptide Y–induced insulin release and NPY receptor expression in the rat ventromedial hypothalamus
Todd Wisialowski, … , Herbert Herzog, Gregory Cooney
Todd Wisialowski, … , Herbert Herzog, Gregory Cooney
Published May 1, 2000
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2000;105(9):1253-1259. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI8695.
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Article

Adrenalectomy reduces neuropeptide Y–induced insulin release and NPY receptor expression in the rat ventromedial hypothalamus

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Abstract

Chronic central administration of neuropeptide Y (NPY) causes hyperphagia, hyperinsulinemia, and obesity, a response that is prevented by prior adrenalectomy (ADX) in rats. The basis of NPY’s effect and how the acute responses to this peptide are affected by ADX remain unknown. This study investigates the role of glucocorticoids in acute NPY-stimulated food intake, acute NPY-induced insulin release, and hypothalamic NPY-receptor mRNA expression levels. NPY-induced food intake was similar in ADX and control rats after acute intracerebroventricular injection of NPY. Injection of NPY caused a significant increase in plasma insulin in control rats, but this effect was completely absent in ADX rats in which basal plasma insulin levels were also lower than controls. In addition, ADX significantly reduced the number of neurons expressing NPY receptor Y1 and Y5 mRNAs in the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), without affecting Y1- or Y5-mRNA expression in the paraventricular hypothalamus or the arcuate nucleus. These data indicate that glucocorticoids are necessary for acute NPY-mediated insulin release and suggest that the mechanisms involve glucocorticoid regulation of Y1 and Y5 receptors specifically within the VMH nucleus.

Authors

Todd Wisialowski, Rachel Parker, Elaine Preston, Amanda Sainsbury, Edward Kraegen, Herbert Herzog, Gregory Cooney

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Figure 1

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The effect of adrenalectomy on NPY-induced food intake in rats. Rats rec...
The effect of adrenalectomy on NPY-induced food intake in rats. Rats received an acute injection of 1 μg NPY (icv), and cumulative food intake was monitored over the next 4 hours. In a second set of experiments NPY (5 μg) was injected icv and blood sampled for 2 hours without food being available. After 2 hours, food was presented to the rats and food intake monitored over the subsequent hour. Results are expressed as the mean ± SE. Black bars represent sham-operated NPY-injected rats (n = 12), and gray bars represent ADX NPY-injected rats (n = 7).

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