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The Melanocortin Agonist Melanotan‐II Reduces the Orexigenic and Adipogenic Effects of Neuropeptide Y (NPY) but Does not Affect the NPY‐Driven Suppressive Effects on the Gonadotropic and Somatotropic Axes in the Male Rat
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Citations
62
References
2003
Year
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a strong orexigenic neurotransmitter also known to modulate several neuroendocrine axes. alpha-Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) is an essential anorectic neuropeptide, acting on hypothalamic MC3/4 receptor subtypes. When given as an intracerebroventricular bolus injection, Melanotan-II (MT-II), a non selective MC receptor agonist, inhibits feeding, suppresses the NPY orexigenic action, and reduces basal insulinaemia. We evaluated the effects of a 7-day central infusion of MT-II (15 nmol/day) given either alone or in association with NPY (5 nmol/day) in male Sprague-Dawley rats. MT-II produced almost full anorexia for 1-2 days but then feeding gradually returned to normal despite continued MT-II infusion. When coinfused with NPY, MT-II also produced the same initial anorectic episode but then maintained feeding to upper normal levels, thus cancelling the hyperphagia driven by NPY. Whereas NPY infusion produced a doubling of fat pad weight, MT-II reduced adiposity by a factor of two compared to pair-fed rats, and vastly curtailed the NPY-driven increase in fat pad weight. MT-II infusion also significantly curtailed the NPY-induced rise in insulin and leptin secretions. NPY infusion significantly inhibited hypothalamic pro-opiomelanocortin mRNA expression, most likely cancelling the alpha-MSH anorectic activity. As expected from previous studies, chronic NPY infusion strongly inhibited both the gonadotropic and somatotropic axes, and coinfusion of MT-II did not reverse these NPY-driven effects, in sharp contrast with that seen for the metabolic data. MT-II infusion alone had little effect on these axes. In conclusion, chronic MT-II infusion generated a severe but transient reduction in feeding, suggesting an escape phenomenon, and clearly reduced fat pad size. When coinfused with NPY, MT-II was able to cancel most of the NPY effects on feeding, but not those on the neuroendocrine axes. It appears therefore that, as expected, NPY and alpha-MSH closely interact in the control of feeding, whereas the neural pathways by which NPY affects growth and reproduction are distinct and not sensitive to MC peptide modulation.
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