Neuropeptide Y attenuates satiety: evidence from a detailed analysis patterns ingestion

Centrally injected neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a potent stimulant of ingestive behavior capable of augmenting both food and fluid intake in fully satiated animals. To gain further insight into NPY's mechanism of action, we recorded patterns of licking behavior in rats drinking sweetened condensed m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain research 1994-02, Vol.636 (1), p.28-34
Hauptverfasser: Lynch, Wesley C., Hart, Patti, Babcock, Alex M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Centrally injected neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a potent stimulant of ingestive behavior capable of augmenting both food and fluid intake in fully satiated animals. To gain further insight into NPY's mechanism of action, we recorded patterns of licking behavior in rats drinking sweetened condensed milk solutions immediately after lateral ventricular injection of NPY (10 μg) or vehicle. In a separate study, we examined licking patterns after 23 h food deprivation (FD) that produced approximately the same total intake as NPY. Consistent with previous reports, we found NPY stimulated intake by increasing total ingestion time and total volume consumed during a 1-h test. Although NPY the number of bouts of licking and shortened pauses between bouts, it also decreased mean bout size, duration and within-bout lick rat (local rate). It had no significant effect on start latency or lick efficiency (licks/ml). Further analyses revealed that NPY attenuated satiety (reduced slope of lick-rate functions with session time) but had no significant effect on the beginning lick rate, a measure related to orosensory excitation. In contrast to NPY, FD increased both the beginning lick rate and individual bout size without changing either the mean number of bouts or the pause between bouts. In general, NPY stimulated an intermittent pattern of licking and delayed satiation whereas FD increased the initial rate of licking and the size of individual bouts without changing the basic licking pattern. The increase in initial lick rate suggests that FD, unlike NPY, enhances orosensory stimulation. These data compliment previous results showing that NPY increases the motivation to eat. In particular, the present data suggest that NPY also promotes ingestion by producing a distinctive pattern of ingestion and slowing the rate of satiation.
ISSN:0006-8993
1872-6240
DOI:10.1016/0006-8993(94)90171-6