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. 2005 Apr;39(2):103-15.
doi: 10.1016/j.npep.2005.01.005.

Acute, subacute and chronic effects of central neuropeptide Y on energy balance in rats

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Acute, subacute and chronic effects of central neuropeptide Y on energy balance in rats

M Székely et al. Neuropeptides. 2005 Apr.

Abstract

Central neuropeptide Y (NPY) injection has been reported to cause hyperphagia and in some cases also hypometabolism or hypothermia. Chronic central administration induced a moderate rise of short duration in body weight, without consistent metabolic/thermal changes. In the present studies the acute and subsequent subacute ingestive and metabolic/thermal changes were studied following intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of NPY in cold-adapted and non-adapted rats, or the corresponding chronic changes following i.c.v. NPY infusion. Besides confirming basic earlier data, we demonstrated novel findings: a temporal relationship for the orexigenic and metabolic/thermal effects, and differences of coordination in acute/subacute/chronic phases or states. The acute phase (30-60 min after injection) was anabolic: coordinated hyperphagia and hypometabolism/hypothermia. NPY evoked a hypothermia by suppressing any (hyper)metabolism in excess of basal metabolic rate, without enhancing heat loss. Thus, acute hypothermia was observed in sub-thermoneutral but not thermoneutral environments. The subsequent subacute catabolic phase exhibited opposite effects: slight increase in metabolic rate, rise in body temperature, reaching a plateau within 3-4 h after injection -- this was maintained for at least 24 h; meanwhile the food intake decreased and the normal daily weight gain stopped. This rebound is only indirectly related to NPY. Chronic (7-day long) i.c.v. NPY infusion induced an anabolic phase for 2-3 days, followed by a catabolic phase and fever, despite continued infusion. In cold-adaptation environment the primary metabolic effect of the infusion induced a moderate hypothermia with lower daytime nadirs and nocturnal peaks of the circadian temperature rhythm, while at near-thermoneutral environments in non-adapted rats the infusion attenuated only the nocturnal temperature rise by suppressing night-time hypermetabolism. Further finding is that in cold-adapted animals, the early feeding effect of NPY-infusion was enhanced, whereas the early hypothermic effect in cold was limited by interference with competing thermoregulatory mechanisms.

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