Obesity and endocrine dysfunction in mice with deletions of both neuropeptide Y and galanin
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Authors
Wynick, D.
Weinshenker, David
Steiner, Robert A.
Clifton, Donald K.
Hohmann, John G.
Teklemichael, Dawit N.
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American Society for Microbiology
Abstract
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and galanin have both been implicated in the
regulation of body weight, yet mice bearing deletions of either of these
molecules have unremarkable metabolic phenotypes. To investigate whether
galanin and NPY might compensate for one another, we produced mutants
lacking both neuropeptides (GAL(-/-)/NPY(-/-)). We found that male
GAL(-/-)/NPY(-/-) mice ate significantly more and were much heavier (30%)
than wild-type (WT) controls. GAL(-/-)/NPY(-/-) mice responded to a
high-fat diet by gaining more weight than WT mice gain, and they were
unable to regulate their weight normally after a change in diet.
GAL(-/-)/NPY(-/-) mice had elevated levels of leptin, insulin, and
glucose, and they lost more weight than WT mice during chronic leptin
treatment. Galanin mRNA was increased in the hypothalamus of NPY(-/-)
mice, providing evidence of compensatory regulation in single mutants. The
disruption of energy balance observed in GAL(-/-)/NPY(-/-) double
knockouts is not found in the phenotype of single knockouts of either
molecule. The unexpected obesity phenotype may result from the
dysregulation of the leptin and insulin systems that normally keep body
weight within the homeostatic range.
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Citation
Mol Cell Biol. 2004 Apr;24(7):2978-85
