Neither Agouti-Related Protein nor Neuropeptide Y Is Critically Required for the Regulation of Energy Homeostasis in Mice
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Published:2002-07-15
Issue:14
Volume:22
Page:5027-5035
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ISSN:0270-7306
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Container-title:Molecular and Cellular Biology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Mol Cell Biol
Author:
Qian Su1, Chen Howard1, Weingarth Drew1, Trumbauer Myrna E.1, Novi Dawn E.1, Guan Xiaoming1, Yu Hong1, Shen Zhu1, Feng Yue1, Frazier Easter1, Chen Airu1, Camacho Ramon E.2, Shearman Lauren P.2, Gopal-Truter Shobhna3, MacNeil Douglas J.1, Van der Ploeg Lex H. T.1, Marsh Donald J.1
Affiliation:
1. Departments of Obesity Research 2. Animal Pharmacology 3. Comparative Medicine, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey 07065
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Agouti-related protein (AgRP), a neuropeptide abundantly expressed in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, potently stimulates feeding and body weight gain in rodents. AgRP is believed to exert its effects through the blockade of signaling by α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone at central nervous system (CNS) melanocortin-3 receptor (Mc3r) and Mc4r. We generated AgRP-deficient (
Agrp
−/−
) mice to examine the physiological role of AgRP.
Agrp
−/−
mice are viable and exhibit normal locomotor activity, growth rates, body composition, and food intake. Additionally,
Agrp
−/−
mice display normal responses to starvation, diet-induced obesity, and the administration of exogenous leptin or neuropeptide Y (NPY). In situ hybridization failed to detect altered CNS expression levels for proopiomelanocortin, Mc3r, Mc4r, or NPY mRNAs in
Agrp
−/−
mice. As AgRP and the orexigenic peptide NPY are coexpressed in neurons of the arcuate nucleus, we generated AgRP and NPY double-knockout (
Agrp
−/−
;
Npy
−/−
) mice to determine whether NPY or AgRP plays a compensatory role in
Agrp
−/−
or NPY-deficient (
Npy
−/−
) mice, respectively. Similarly to mice deficient in either AgRP or NPY,
Agrp
−/−
;
Npy
−/−
mice suffer no obvious feeding or body weight deficits and maintain a normal response to starvation. Our results demonstrate that neither AgRP nor NPY is a critically required orexigenic factor, suggesting that other pathways capable of regulating energy homeostasis can compensate for the loss of both AgRP and NPY.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Reference30 articles.
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