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Estradiol decreases the orexigenic effect of neuropeptide Y, but not agouti-related protein, in ovariectomized rats.

Author
Abstract
:

Available data suggest that estradiol exerts an inhibitory effect on food intake by modulating the actions of multiple gut- and brain-derived peptides implicated in the control of food intake. For example, recent studies have shown that estradiol decreases the orexigenic effects of ghrelin and melanin-concentrating hormone. In the present study, we examined estradiol's ability to decrease the actions of two additional orexigenic peptides, neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related protein (AgRP). Food intake was monitored following lateral ventricular infusions of 5 microg NPY, 10 microg AgRP, or saline vehicle in ovariectomized rats treated with either 1 microg estradiol or sesame oil vehicle. NPY increased food intake for 2h in both oil- and estradiol-treated ovariectomized rats. During this interval, the orexigenic effect of NPY was significantly greater in oil-treated rats, relative to estradiol-treated rats. In contrast to the short-term action of NPY, a single injection of AgRP increased food intake for 3 days in oil- and estradiol-treated rats. Meal pattern analysis revealed that the orexigenic effect of AgRP is mediated by an increase in meal size, not meal number. Unlike that observed following NPY treatment, estradiol failed to modulate the magnitude by which AgRP increased food intake and meal size. We conclude that a physiological regimen of estradiol treatment decreases the orexigenic effect of NPY, but not AgRP, in ovariectomized rats.

Year of Publication
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2008
Journal
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Behavioural brain research
Volume
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191
Issue
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2
Number of Pages
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173-7
Date Published
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2008
ISSN Number
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0166-4328
URL
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https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0166-4328(08)00151-4
DOI
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10.1016/j.bbr.2008.03.019
Short Title
:
Behav Brain Res
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