Ornithine has been identified as a potential satiety signal in the brains of neonatal
chicks. We hypothesized that brain nutrient signals such as amino acids and
appetite-related neuropeptides synergistically regulate food intake. To test this
hypothesis, we investigated the interaction between neuropeptide Y (NPY) and ornithine in
the control of feeding behavior in chicks and the associated central and peripheral amino
acid metabolic processes. Five-day-old chicks were intracerebroventricularly injected with
saline, NPY (375 pmol), or NPY plus ornithine (2 or 4 μmol) at 10 μl per chick, and then
subjected to
ad libitum
feeding conditions; food intake was monitored for
30 min after injection. Brain and plasma samples were collected after the experiment to
determine free amino acid concentrations. Co-injection of NPY and ornithine significantly
attenuated the orexigenic effect induced by NPY in a dose-dependent manner. Central NPY
significantly decreased amino adipic acid, asparagine, γ-aminobutyric acid, leucine,
phenylalanine, tyrosine, and isoleucine levels, but significantly increased lysine levels
in the brain. Co-injection of NPY and ornithine significantly increased ornithine and
proline levels in all examined brain regions, but decreased diencephalic tryptophan and
glycine levels compared with those of the control and NPY-alone groups. Co-injection of
NPY and high-dose ornithine significantly decreased methionine levels in all brain
regions. Central NPY significantly suppressed the plasma concentrations of amino acids,
including proline, asparagine, methionine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, leucine, isoleucine,
glycine, glutamine, alanine, arginine, and valine, and this reduction was greater when NPY
was co-injected with ornithine. These results suggest that brain ornithine interacts with
NPY to regulate food intake in neonatal chicks. Furthermore, central NPY may induce an
anabolic effect that is modified by co-injection with ornithine.