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Volume 17, Number 13,
Issue of July 1, 1997
pp. 5175-5182
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Interaction of the Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus and
Central Nucleus of the Amygdala in Naloxone Blockade of Neuropeptide
Y-Induced Feeding Revealed by c-fos Expression
James D. Pomonis1,
Allen S. Levine1, 2, 3, 4, and
Charles J. Billington2, 3, 4
1 Graduate Program in Neuroscience and
2 Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, 3 Minnesota Obesity Center,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55417, and 4 Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55417
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a powerful inducer of food intake with a
key site of action in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the
hypothalamus. An effective method for inhibiting the effects of NPY is
pretreatment with the opioid antagonists naloxone or naltrexone. In the
present study, we used immunohistochemistry for cFos as a marker of
neuronal activity to map the effects of PVN-injected NPY and blockade
of these effects by peripheral injection of naloxone. Injection of NPY
into the PVN resulted in an increase in food intake that was blocked by
peripheral administration of naloxone. PVN NPY also resulted in
increased cFos immunoreactivity (cFos-IR) in the PVN independent of
food intake, and although peripheral naloxone inhibited NPY-induced
feeding, it did not alter cFos-IR in the PVN. cFos-IR in the central
nucleus of the amygdala (CNA) increased in response to both NPY and
naloxone. Furthermore, the response to NPY and naloxone was additive,
suggesting that peripheral naloxone and PVN NPY activate different
neuronal populations in the CNA. Three other brain regions, the nucleus of the solitary tract, the ventrolateral medulla, and the supraoptic nucleus, all showed increases in cFos-IR in this study, but these changes came only as a result of increased food intake after
PVN-injected NPY. The current data suggest that the CNA is a site
important for the integration of the NPY and opioid systems.
Key words:
neuropeptide Y;
feeding;
opioids;
paraventricular
nucleus;
central nucleus of the amygdala;
nucleus of the solitary
tract
INTRODUCTION
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a member of the pancreatic
polypeptide family and is the most potent stimulator of feeding known. NPY is also known to affect energy balance, suggesting that it plays a
crucial role in a central neural network involved in energy homeostasis. Central administration of NPY results in increased feeding
(Clark et al., 1984
; Levine and Morley, 1984
; Stanley and Leibowitz,
1984
), decreased firing of sympathetic fibers innervating brown adipose
tissue (BAT) (Egawa et al., 1991
), decreased BAT activity as measured
by uncoupling protein (UCP) mRNA levels, and increased fat storage in
white adipose tissue (Billington et al., 1991
, 1994
). It has been
determined that the primary site of action of NPY in the regulation of
these effects is in the hypothalamus, particularly the paraventricular
nucleus (PVN) (Stanley et al., 1985
; Abe, 1989; Billington et al.,
1994
) or the nearby perifornical area (Stanley et al., 1993
). NPY
immunoreactivity is highest in the PVN, almost exclusively in nerve
terminals (Allen et al., 1983
; Chronwall et al., 1985
; Sawchenko et
al., 1985
; Stanley et al., 1993
), a large portion of which arise from
cell bodies in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) (Morris, 1989
).
This ARC-PVN NPYergic pathway has been shown to be highly sensitive to
energy status. ARC NPY mRNA and PVN NPY levels increase in response to
food deprivation or food restriction and normalize after refeeding
(Sahu et al., 1988
; Calza et al., 1989
; Brady et al., 1990
; Pages et
al., 1993
). It has also been shown that NPY release in the PVN
increases before a scheduled meal and decreases after the meal (Kalra
et al., 1991
).
It has been documented that blockade of opioid receptors inhibits both
the orexigenic (Levine et al., 1990a
,b
; Lambert et al., 1993
; Shibasaki
et al., 1995
) and thermogenic effects of NPY (Kotz et al., 1995
).
Peripheral or intracerebroventricular injection of naloxone,
naltrexone, or specific opioid antagonists before central
administration of NPY blocks the increase in food intake and the
decrease in UCP mRNA in BAT seen with NPY injection alone. The site of
action of naloxone is different from that of NPY, however, because
naltrexone injection into the PVN is ineffective at inhibiting either
the orexigenic or thermogenic effects of PVN-administered NPY (Kotz et
al., 1995
). This suggests that there is an interaction between NPY and
opioid systems in regard to the role of NPY in energy homeostasis, with
the two systems having separate primary sites of action.
Microinjection studies have shed further light on this interaction
between NPY and opioids. Injection of naltrexone into the rostral
nucleus of the solitary tract (rNTS) before PVN injection of NPY
abolished the feeding and thermogenic effects seen with PVN NPY
injections alone (Kotz et al., 1995
). Thus, the NTS was implicated
along with the ARC and PVN in the circuitry mediating the effects of
NPY on energy balance; however, it was unclear whether the inhibitory
effects of naloxone on NPY were mediated by NTS to PVN efferents or by
PVN to NTS efferents. The purpose of this study was to examine cFos
immunoreactivity (cFos-IR) to determine possible brain nuclei involved
in the interaction of NPY and naloxone.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Experimental procedures. Forty-one male Sprague
Dawley rats (Harlan, Madison, WI) weighing 250-325 gm at the start of
the experiment were used in this study. They were housed individually in wire mesh cages on a 12 hr light/dark cycle (lights on at 7 A.M.).
Rats had ad libitum access to food and water at all times except where noted. Under Nembutal anesthesia, rats had stainless steel
guide cannulas (Plastics One, Roanoke, VA) implanted into the right PVN
using the following coordinates from bregma according to the atlas of
Paxinos and Watson (1986)
: 0.5 mm lateral, 1.9 mm posterior, and 7.3 mm
below the surface of the skull. Rats were allowed 1 week to recover
from surgery before experimental manipulations were begun. On
experimental days, rats received an intraperitoneal injection of either
1 mg/kg naloxone (RBI, Natick, MA) or isotonic saline followed 30 min
later by a PVN injection of 1 µg/µl NPY (Peninsula Inc., Belmont,
CA) or 1 µl isotonic saline; they were killed 1 hr later.
Five treatment groups of seven to nine rats per group were used in this
study (Table 1). The first group (sal/sal) received an
intraperitoneal injection of 0.9% saline followed by a PVN injection
of 0.9% saline. The second group (nlx/sal) received an intraperitoneal
injection of 1 mg/kg naloxone followed by a PVN injection of 0.9%
saline. The third group (sal/NPY) received an intraperitoneal injection
of 0.9% saline and a PVN injection of 1 µg NPY. The fourth group
[sal/NPY(D)] received an intraperitoneal injection of 0.9% saline
and a PVN injection of 1 µg NPY but was deprived of food after
injections. This group was included to control for possible effects
that food consumption may have on cFos-IR. The fifth group (nlx/NPY)
received an intraperitoneal injection of 1 mg/kg naloxone followed by a
PVN injection of 1 µg NPY. The group abbreviations in parentheses
will be used throughout the remainder of this paper.
Table 1.
Key to treatment
groups
| Treatment |
Peripheral
injection |
PVN injection |
Food
available? |
|
| sal/sal |
Saline (0.9%) |
Saline
(0.9%) |
Yes |
| nlx/sal |
Naloxone (1 mg/kg) |
Saline
(0.9%) |
Yes |
| sal/NPY |
Saline (0.9%) |
NPY (1 µg) |
Yes |
| sal/NPY(D) |
Saline (0.9%) |
NPY (1 µg) |
No |
| nlx/NPY |
Naloxone (1 mg/kg) |
NPY (1 µg) |
Yes |
|
|
|
Tissue preparation and immunohistochemical methods. One hour
after the PVN injection, animals were asphyxiated by CO2
and perfused rapidly through the aorta with 180 ml of cold
Ca2+-free Tyrode's solution, followed by slow
perfusions with 400 ml of Lana's fix and then 400 ml of 10% sucrose
in Sorenson's buffer. Brains then were removed and stored in 10%
sucrose/Sorenson's at 4°C for a minimum of 24 hr until they were
sectioned. Frozen sections were cut on a cryostat at a thickness of 40 µm and immediately cryoprotected in sucrose/ethylene glycol and
stored at
20°C until ready for use in immunohistochemistry. Storage
of tissue in this manner preserves antigenicity and morphology for up
to 90 d (Watson et al., 1986
).
For cFos immunohistochemistry, sections containing the anatomical areas
of interest were removed from the cryoprotectant solution and rinsed
4 × 5 min in PBS followed by a 30 min incubation in blocking
solution (2% normal goat serum/0.1% BSA/0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS).
Sections were then rinsed 3 × 5 min in PBS and incubated for 48 hr at 4°C in cFos antiserum (Oncogene Science, Cambridge, MA) at a
dilution of 1:40,000. Next, sections were rinsed 8 × 5 min in PBS
and then incubated in biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) at a dilution of 1:500 for 1 hr at room
temperature. Sections were again rinsed 4 × 5 min in PBS and then
incubated in Vectastain Elite ABC reagent (Vector Laboratories) for 1 hr at room temperature. Sections were then rinsed 2 × 5 min in
PBS and 3 × 5 min in sodium acetate buffer, followed by
incubation with DAB-nickel sulfate solution for 2.5 min; the reaction
was stopped by rinsing 3 × 5 min with distilled water. Stained
sections were mounted on gelatin-coated slides, air-dried, and
coverslipped.
Quantitation of cFos-IR. Sections were viewed using a Leitz
Orthoplan 2 microscope, and images were captured using a cooled CCD
camera (Optronics Engineering, Goleta, CA) linked to a Power Macintosh
8500/120 computer. Captured images were analyzed using National
Institutes of Health Image 1.51 software (National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, MD). A region of constant size
(mm2) that completely contained the anatomical area
of interest was outlined, and the number of cFos-IR nuclei were counted
and expressed as number of cFos-IR nuclei per region of interest.
Expression of data for the PVN was slightly different because cannula
placement often resulted in distortion of the PVN. Because of this, we
were frequently unable to obtain constant area measurements of the PVN.
Thus, the region corresponding to the PVN was outlined and measured,
and the number of cFos-IR cells in that area was counted and expressed
as number of cFos-IR cells per mm2. For all sites
studied, bilateral measurements were taken on up to three slices per
animal. Table 2 shows the coordinates of all sites
examined according to the atlas of Paxinos and Watson (1986)
. Counts
were averaged for each animal, and data were analyzed using a one-way
repeated measures ANOVA with treatment as the independent variable.
Post hoc analysis was performed using Fisher's PLSD test.
Seven animals showed improper cannula placement, and data from these
animals were discarded. Data from two additional animals were not used
in this study, because they were determined to be statistical outliers
according to the universal test for the rejection of a single normal
outlier (Hawkins, 1980
). This test calculates a new F
statistic using residual sums of squares, followed by a Bonferonni
correction to determine whether a single data point can be considered
an outlier.
RESULTS
Analysis of total food consumed over the 1.5 hr after the initial
(peripheral) injection showed a main effect of treatment (F(3,30) = 3.69; p = 0.0226).
For this analysis, the sal/NPY(D) group was removed, because that group
did not have access to food during this time period. Mean food intake
(± SEM) was as follows: sal/sal = 0.171 ± 0.171 gm,
nlx/sal = 0.150 ± 0.150 gm, nlx/NPY = 0.645 ± 0.225 gm, sal/NPY = 1.375 ± 0.480 gm. Post hoc
analysis showed that the sal/NPY group ate significantly more food than all other groups and that the sal/sal, nlx/sal, and nlx/NPY groups were
not statistically different from one another, demonstrating that
peripheral administration of 1 mg/kg naloxone inhibits the behavioral
effects of 1 µg of PVN-injected NPY.
In the PVN, there was a main effect of treatment on cFos-IR
(F(4,29) = 9.361; p = 0.0001),
with significantly higher levels of cFos-IR in all treatments receiving
PVN injections of NPY; however, neither peripheral naloxone nor the
presence or absence of food altered cFos-IR in the PVN (Fig.
1). No differences in cFos-IR between the injected and
noninjected PVN were seen after NPY administration for any treatments,
indicating that unilateral injection of NPY resulted in bilateral
activation of the PVN (data not shown).
Fig. 1.
Photomicrographs showing cFos-IR in the PVN
in response to peripheral injection of either 0.9% saline or 1 mg/kg
naloxone, followed 30 min later by PVN injection of either 0.9% saline
or 1 µg NPY. cFos-IR was significantly increased by PVN injection of
NPY and was not affected by feeding or by blockade of NPY-induced feeding attributable to naloxone injection. Treatments abbreviated as
per Table 1. A-E on photomicrographs correspond to
A-E on graph. Graph represents treatment
means; error bars represent SEM. *Significant from
sal/sal group. Magnification, 25×. Scale bar, 200 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (137K GIF file)]
In the central nucleus of the amygdala (CNA), cFos-IR was affected by
both naloxone and NPY injection (Fig. 2). There was a
main effect of treatment on cFos-IR in the CNA
(F(4,23) = 7.493; p = 0.0005),
and post hoc analysis showed significant differences between
several groups. The nlx/sal, sal/NPY(D), and nlx/NPY groups all showed
significantly higher levels of cFos-IR than the sal/sal group. This
suggests that peripheral naloxone administration as well as PVN NPY
injection independently resulted in a significant increase of cFos-IR
in the CNA. When all groups were included in the analysis, NPY failed
to significantly increase cFos-IR when food was available. That is, the
sal/NPY group was not significantly different from the sal/sal group;
however, when a one-way ANOVA was conducted to determine a possible
effect of NPY on cFos-IR by using only the sal/sal, sal/NPY(D), and
sal/NPY groups, there was a main effect of treatment
(F(2,11) = 12.926; p = 0.0013), with both the sal/NPY(D) and the sal/NPY groups showing significantly higher cFos-IR in the CNA than the sal/sal group according to Fisher's
PLSD test. The nlx/NPY group showed the highest levels of cFos-IR of
any of the five groups. cFos-IR was significantly higher in the nlx/NPY
group than in the sal/sal, nlx/sal, or sal/NPY groups, but was not
significantly higher than the sal/NPY(D) group. The patterns of cFos-IR
induced by naloxone or NPY did not show specificity to either the
medial or lateral subdivisions of the CNA (data not shown).
Fig. 2.
Photomicrographs showing cFos-IR in the CNA in
response to peripheral injection of either 0.9% saline or 1 mg/kg
naloxone, followed 30 min later by PVN injection of either 0.9% saline
or 1 µg NPY. cFos-IR was significantly increased by PVN injection of
NPY and by peripheral naloxone injection. Treatments abbreviated as per
Table 1. A-E on photomicrographs correspond to
A-E on graph. Graph represents treatment
means; error bars represent SEM. *Significant from
sal/sal group; **significant differences among
nlx/NPY group and other groups indicated by
line. Magnification, 25×. Scale bar, 200 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (111K GIF file)]
Figure 3 shows the c-fos response in two
regions of the NTS: the intermediate NTS (iNTS) and the rNTS. The
overall response was the same for both of these regions. In the iNTS,
although there was a main effect of treatment
(F(4,22) = 3.963; p = 0.0143), cFos-IR was affected only by the combination of NPY administration and
feeding. In the rNTS, again there was a main effect of treatment (F(4,22) = 3.032; p = 0.0392),
with only the sal/NPY group, but not the sal/NPY(D) group, showing
significantly higher levels of cFos-IR.
Fig. 3.
Quantitation of cFos-IR in the rostral nucleus of
the solitary tract (rNTS) and the intermediate NTS
(iNTS) in response to peripheral injection of either
0.9% saline or 1 mg/kg naloxone, followed 30 min later by PVN
injection of either isotonic saline or 1 µg NPY. Changes in cFos-IR
were seen only in the condition of PVN-administered NPY with food
consumption. *Significant from sal/sal control. Error
bars represent SEM.
[View Larger Version of this Image (36K GIF file)]
For measurement of cFos-IR in the nearby ventrolateral medulla (VLM), a
similar result was seen (Fig. 4). There was
a main effect of treatment (F(4,22) = 3.495;
p = 0.0236), with the sal/NPY group being the only
group to show a significant increase in cFos-IR. Although the other
groups were not statistically affected, there was a trend of increased
cFos-IR in response to NPY that was lessened by peripheral
administration of naloxone.
Fig. 4.
Quantitation of cFos-IR in the VLM in response to
peripheral injection of either 0.9% saline or 1 mg/kg naloxone,
followed 30 min later by PVN injection of either 0.9% saline or 1 µg
NPY. Increases in cFos-IR were seen only with PVN NPY injection with food consumption. *Significant from sal/sal control.
Error bars represent SEM.
[View Larger Version of this Image (33K GIF file)]
In the supraoptic nucleus (SON), cFos-IR was responsive to a
combination of NPY and food intake (Fig. 5). There was a
main effect of treatment (F(4,26) = 4.712;
p = 0.0054), and post hoc analysis showed
that cFos-IR was significantly higher in the sal/NPY and nlx/NPY
groups. This suggests that the cFos-IR in the SON is responsive to NPY
and to feeding; however, although cFos-IR in the SON was still
significantly higher in the nlx/NPY group than in the sal/sal group, it
should be noted that the nlx/NPY group did eat more food (but not
significantly more food) than the sal/sal group. When we examined
cFos-IR in the SON for an effect of NPY by recalculating the ANOVA
using only the sal/sal, sal/NPY(D), and sal/NPY groups, there was a
main effect of treatment (F(2,16) = 12.011, p = 0.0007). Post hoc analysis showed a
statistical increase in cFos-IR only in the sal/NPY group. This
suggests that the SON is responsive primarily to feeding and not simply
to NPY.
Fig. 5.
Quantitation of cFos-IR in the SON in response to
peripheral injection of either 0.9% saline or 1 mg/kg naloxone,
followed 30 min later by PVN injection of either 0.9% saline or 1 µg
NPY. Both the sal/NPY and nlx/NPY groups
showed significant increases in cFos-IR. *Significant from
sal/sal control. Error bars represent SEM.
[View Larger Version of this Image (34K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
The aim of this study was to determine a possible site or sites
within the CNS responsible for the interaction of NPY and naloxone. To
accomplish this, we chose to stimulate the PVN directly by
microinjection of NPY. This allows for precise activation of the PVN, a
region known to be involved in the control of food intake and energy
balance (Billington et al., 1994
). We chose to examine cFos-IR, because
this technique has been shown to be useful in metabolic mapping studies
in both mono- and multisynaptic systems (Sagar et al., 1988
). Because
naloxone failed to alter NPY-induced cFos-IR in the PVN, we conclude
that naloxone inhibits the effects of NPY at a site outside the
PVN.
The data presented here suggest that NPY induces feeding by activation
of neurons within the PVN that in turn project to other, possibly
extrahypothalamic sites where there is an interaction with an
opioidergic system. The PVN was solely responsive to the presence or
absence of NPY and was unaffected by naloxone or the increased food
intake induced by NPY administration. Although naloxone had a robust
antagonistic effect on the behavioral effects of NPY, naloxone does not
seem to antagonize the effects of PVN-injected NPY at the level of the
PVN, because NPY-induced cFos-IR in the PVN was unaffected by naloxone.
Furthermore, naloxone did not affect basal levels of cFos-IR in the
PVN.
These results confirm previous findings that the PVN is a principal
site of action of NPY. Increases in cFos-IR in the PVN after central
administration of NPY have been reported previously (Li et al., 1994
;
Lambert et al., 1995
; Xu et al., 1995
), with slightly varying results.
Li et al. (1994)
and Xu et al. (1995)
both reported that cFos-IR in the
PVN increased after ventricular injection of NPY and increased even
further when rats were allowed to eat after NPY administration. In the
current study, we did not see any effects of food intake on cFos-IR in
the PVN, nor did Lambert et al. (1995)
, who examined cFos-IR in various
subregions of the PVN after intracerebroventricular injection of NPY.
The data from this study also support previous work that has shown that
the PVN is not the site of the antagonistic effects of naloxone on NPY
(Kotz et al., 1995
).
The data from the CNA are perhaps the most compelling in this study.
The extended amygdala, and especially the CNA, have been reported to
play both stimulatory and inhibitory roles in the control of food
intake. Kainic acid lesions of the CNA have been reported to increase
feeding and body weight (Hajnal et al., 1992
), as have electrolytic
lesions of the posterodorsal amygdala (King et al., 1993
, 1994
, 1997
).
Chemical stimulation of the CNA with the GABAA antagonist
bicuculline (Minano et al., 1992
) or various opioid agonists also
results in increased food intake (for review, see Gosnell and Levine,
1996
). Conversely, CNA injections of the GABAA agonist
muscimol decrease deprivation-induced feeding (Minano et al., 1992
), as
do injections with a number of opioid antagonists (for review, see
Bodnar, 1996
). In the current study we report evidence for two distinct
neuronal populations within the CNA that may play separate roles in the
interaction of the hypothalamic NPYergic system with an opioidergic
system. Our data show increased cFos-IR in the CNA after peripheral
naloxone administration and increases in cFos-IR in the CNA after PVN
injection of NPY. Furthermore, when naloxone and NPY are
coadministered, the cFos-IR in the CNA is elevated not only from the
baseline controls but from the groups receiving either naloxone or NPY
alone. Similar to results seen in the PVN, cFos-IR in the CNA was
unresponsive to increased feeding after NPY, contrary to results
reported previously (Li et al., 1994
).
Although there was not regional specificity in c-fos
expression after administration of NPY or naloxone, the additive effect seen after coadministration suggests that two distinct neuronal populations are activated: one by NPY and the other by naloxone. The
fact that the pattern of cFos-IR in the CNA in response to naloxone and
NPY does not mimic the behavioral effects seen when these two
substances are coadministered suggests that the CNA may integrate
rather than regulate the inhibitory effects of naloxone on NPY; i.e., a
site that receives projections from the CNA may be responsive to NPY,
and naloxone-activated cells in the CNA may inhibit the NPY-induced
activation of that area. Of the five sites we examined, none showed a
pattern of cFos-IR consistent with this scenario, but other areas (such
as the parabrachial nucleus, the nucleus accumbens, and the lateral
septum) may be candidates for such a site. Although it has been
demonstrated that the CNA projects directly to the PVN (Gray et al.,
1989
), reciprocal projections have not been identified. Our data
demonstrate a PVN-CNA pathway, but whether this is a mono- or
multisynaptic pathway cannot be determined here.
Along with various forebrain regions, several hindbrain areas,
including the NTS, have been implicated in the regulation of food
intake. Given that naltrexone administration into the NTS inhibits the
increased feeding and decreased thermogenesis seen after PVN-injected
NPY (Kotz et al., 1995
), we originally hypothesized that we would see
increased cFos-IR in the NTS in response to NPY, which in turn would be
inhibited by naloxone; however, we saw increases in cFos-IR only in
response to NPY and food intake but not to NPY alone. The pattern of
c-fos expression was nearly identical for the two subregions
of the NTS examined. Similar increases in cFos-IR in the NTS have been
seen after food intake (Fraser and Davison, 1993
; Fraser et al., 1995
)
or infusion of nutrients directly into the digestive system (Zittel et
al., 1994
).
One possible explanation for the failure of either naloxone or NPY
alone to affect cFos-IR in the NTS is that naloxone or NPY could indeed
activate cells in the NTS, but after activation these cells do not show
increased levels of c-fos expression. Another explanation
could be that naloxone blocks opioid receptors located on fibers in the
NTS, but the affected cell bodies may lie in other, distal regions. If
this latter circumstance were the case, no changes in cFos-IR in the
NTS would be seen, because cFos is a nuclear protein. Neuroanatomical
evidence supports interactions between the NTS and both the PVN and
CNA. There are projections from the NTS to the CNA (Petrov et al.,
1993
; Zardetto-Smith and Gray, 1996
) and projections from the CNA to
the NTS (Petrov et al., 1995
; Pickel et al., 1995
). It may be that
peripheral naloxone administration blocks opioid receptors in the NTS,
the result of which is seen as alterations in c-fos
expression in neurons located in the CNA. Finally, it may be that
naloxone can act at more than one site to inhibit the effects of NPY,
and peripheral injection of naloxone acts primarily at the CNA and not
the NTS.
The VLM is another area studied that may play an important role in
mediating the effects of the hypothalamic NPYergic system. Although our
data show increased cFos-IR in the VLM only after NPY-induced feeding
and not with NPY administration alone, there is a trend of increased
cFos-IR after PVN injection of NPY without food intake [sal/NPY(D)
group]. Peripheral naloxone injection before PVN NPY administration
abolished this trend. The VLM may be a candidate for the effects of NPY
on sympathetic nervous system activity. The VLM has been implicated in
various autonomic functions such as blood pressure and heart rate
(Granata et al., 1986
), and projections from the PVN have been
demonstrated to course through the VLM to various adipose tissue stores
(Warren et al., 1996
). Furthermore, the VLM is connected with several
of the structures mentioned previously. The VLM innervates the amygdala
(Palkovits et al., 1992
; Petrov et al., 1993
; Roder and Ciriello, 1993
;
Ciriello et al., 1994
), the PVN (Palkovits et al., 1992
; Petrov et al., 1993
; Rinaman et al., 1995
), and the NTS (Sawchenko and Swanson, 1981
).
Evidence exists that the SON is responsive to alterations in feeding
(Verbalis et al., 1986
; Li et al., 1994
; Xu et al., 1995
), although it
has not been shown to play stimulatory or inhibitory roles in food
intake regulation. The increases in cFos-IR in the SON seen here are in
agreement with those seen previously in which the SON seems to be
mostly responsive to feeding (Li et al., 1994
; Xu et al., 1995
). This
likely reflects a release of oxytocin in response to food intake, as
has been reported previously (Verbalis et al., 1986
). In this study we
did not see an increase in cFos-IR in response to NPY alone, as seen
previously (Li et al., 1994
; Xu et al., 1995
). This may be attributable
to differences in sites of injection. In these previous studies,
injections of NPY were made into either the lateral ventricle (Li et
al., 1994
) or the fourth ventricle (Xu et al., 1995
), whereas we
injected NPY directly into the PVN. Although there are no direct
connections from the PVN to the SON (Cirino and Renaud, 1985
), the SON
is innervated by the CNA, which could explain the modest albeit not
significant increase in cFos-IR in the SON in response to PVN NPY in
the absence of food intake.
In summary, we have seen that NPY-induced cFos-IR in the PVN is not
affected by either feeding or peripheral naloxone injection, but
neurons within the CNA are activated by both naloxone and NPY. The
neurons in the CNA that are activated by naloxone may have a different
neurochemical profile than those activated by PVN NPY, because the
c-fos response in the CNA is additive. These data suggest
that the amygdala, specifically the CNA, may be a critical structure in
the interaction of the NPYergic and opioidergic systems in food intake
regulation.
FOOTNOTES
Received Feb. 19, 1997; revised April 8, 1997; accepted April 11, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases Grant 42698 and by the Department of
Veterans Affairs. We thank Joe Ghilardi and Dr. Patrick Mantyh for
their technical assistance with this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Charles J. Billington,
Research Service (151), Veterans Affairs Medical Center, One Veterans
Drive, Minneapolis, MN 55417.
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