Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is known to be involved in the central regulation of appetite, sexual behavior, and reproductive function. Whereas central administration of NPY strongly stimulates feeding in satiated animals, diet restriction or other unfavorable metabolic situations, such as diabetes, produce enhanced NPY gene expression and NPY release in the hypothalamus. Numerous studies have indicated that acute central administration of NPY results in various actions on LH secretion in the rat, either stimulatory or inhibitory. We recently demonstrated that chronic infusion of NPY into the lateral ventricle of adult intact female rats profoundly inhibited both the gonadotropic and somatotropic axes, with disruption of estrous cyclicity. Furthermore, we showed that central chronic infusion of NPY delayed sexual maturation in female rats. To analyze the effects of the same type of chronic NPY treatment on the pituitary-testicular axis, 45-day-old Sprague-Dawley male rats were implanted with stainless steel cannulas in the right lateral ventricle. Ten days later, Alzet osmotic minipumps were filled with different NPY solutions, adjusted to deliver 6, 18, or 36 micrograms/day, connected to the intracerebroventricular (icv) cannula, and sc implanted dorsally. The effects of these treatments were evaluated over 7 days. In one case, rats were castrated 5 days after initiation of NPY treatment, and the effect of castration was evaluated 2 days later. Chronic icv infusion of NPY produced the expected dose-related increases in food intake from 33.0 +/- 0.9 (basal) to 53.4 +/- 3.3 g/day (18 micrograms NPY/day) and body weight gain (5.7 +/- 0.7 to 10.5 +/- 1.2 d/day). As in female rats, this orexigenic action of NPY resulted in a significant dose-related decrease in pituitary weight, from 12.4 +/- 0.7 to 9.9 +/- 0.4 mg. The 7-day NPY infusion produced highly significant decreases in seminal vesicle weight (853 +/- 77 to 230 +/- 31 mg) and testis weight (3.82 +/- 0.09 to 3.18 +/- 0.15 g; P = 0.003). Plasma levels of testosterone (231 +/- 71 to 48 +/- 13 ng/dl), LH (20.7 +/- 3.7 to 9.1 +/- 1.2 ng/ml), and FSH (282 +/- 17 to 190 +/- 18 ng/ml) were markedly decreased at the 18 micrograms/day dosage, as also demonstrated for the 36 micrograms/day dosage. None of these effects was observed if vehicle was infused into the lateral ventricle instead of the NPY solution. When bilateral orchidectomy was performed 5 days after initiation of the NPY infusion (18 micrograms/day), the immediate LH and FSH rises usually seen after castration were seriously blunted.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
OBJECTIVE: NADPH oxidase 4 (NOX4) is a reactive oxygen species (ROS) producing NADPH oxidase that regulates redox homeostasis in diverse insulin-sensitive cell types. In particular, NOX4-derived ROS is a key modulator of adipocyte differentiation and mediates insulin receptor signaling in mature adipocytes in vitro. Our study was aimed at investigating the role of NOX4 in adipose tissue differentiation, whole body metabolic homeostasis and insulin sensitivity in vivo. DESIGN: Mice with genetic ablation of NOX4 (NOX4-deficient mice) were subjected to chow or high-fat-containing diet for 12 weeks. Body weight gain, adiposity, insulin sensitivity, and adipose tissue and liver gene and protein expression were analyzed and compared with similarly treated wild-type mice. RESULTS: Here, we report that NOX4-deficient mice display latent adipose tissue accumulation and are susceptible to diet-induced obesity and early onset insulin resistance. Obesity results from accelerated adipocyte differentiation and hypertrophy, and an increase in whole body energy efficiency. Insulin resistance is associated with increased adipose tissue hypoxia, inflammation and adipocyte apoptosis. In the liver, more severe diet-induced steatosis was observed due to the lack of proper upregulation of mitochondrial fatty acid b-oxidation. CONCLUSION: These findings identify NOX4 as a regulator of metabolic homeostasis. Moreover, they indicate an anti-adipogenic role for NOX4 in vivo and reveal its function as a protector against the development of diet-induced obesity, insulin resistance and hepatosteatosis.
We have previously described the preparation, purification and partial characterization of recombinant (rec) forms of rat luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). In the present study, the special functional features of these hormones were studied further, in vitro and in vivo, and compared with human recLH and recFSH, as well as with human urinary choriongonadotropin (hCG) and rat pituitary LH (NIDDK-RP3). In radioreceptor assay, the affinity of hCG binding to rat testis membranes was 5-fold higher than that of human recLH and 100-fold higher than that of rat recLH. In in vitro bioassay, using dispersed adult mouse interstitial cells or a mouse Leydig tumor cell line (BLT-1), hCG and human recLH were 10-to 20-fold more potent than rat recLH. Correspondingly, rat pituitary LH was about 10-fold less potent than rat recLH, and evoked a maximum testosterone response that was about half of that elicited by the other LH/CG preparations. Rat recFSH was about 10-fold less potent than human recFSH in stimulating cAMP production of a mouse Sertoli cell line (MSC-1) expressing the recombinant rat FSH receptor.The circulating half-times (T Y ) of rat and human rec hormones were assessed after i.v. injections into adult male rats rendered gonadotropin-deficient by treatment with a gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist. A novel immunometric assay was used for the rat FSH measurements. In the one-component model the T Y values of rat and human recLH were 18·2 1·9 min (n=7) and 44·6 3·1 min (n=7) respectively and those of rat and human recFSH were 88·4 10·7 min (n=6) and 55·0 4·2 min (n=6) respectively; the two-component models revealed similar differences between the rec hormone preparations. Collectively, rat recLH was eliminated significantly faster from the circulation than human recLH (P<0·0001). In contrast, the elimination of rat recFSH was significantly slower than that of human recFSH (P=0·02).In conclusion, rat recFSH and rat recLH display lower biopotencies per unit mass than the respective human hormones in vitro, and also in vivo for LH. This is paralleled by shorter T Y of rat recLH than the respective human hormone in the circulation, whereas human recFSH has a shorter T Y than human FSH. The special functional features of the rat rec gonadotropins emphasize the use of these preparations on studies of gonadotropin function in the rat, an important animal model for reproductive physiology.
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