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Publication : Histaminergic neurons are involved in the orexigenic effect of orexin-A.

First Author  Jørgensen EA Year  2005
Journal  Neuroendocrinology Volume  82
Issue  2 Pages  70-7
PubMed ID  16415597 Mgi Jnum  J:115782
Mgi Id  MGI:3692182 Doi  10.1159/000090982
Citation  Jorgensen EA, et al. (2005) Histaminergic neurons are involved in the orexigenic effect of orexin-A. Neuroendocrinology 82(2):70-7
abstractText  Orexin-A is an orexigenic peptide expressed mainly in the hypothalamus. Orexin-A increases and anti-orexin-A antibodies decrease food intake. However, the exact mechanism by which orexin-A exerts its orexigenic action is not fully elucidated. The histaminergic system is known to play a role in feeding behavior and we hypothesized that it could be involved in the orexigenic effect of orexin-A. To study this, we used histamine knockout animals and pharmacological blockade of the histaminergic system and studied the effect of orexin-A on feeding behavior and gene expression of neuropeptide Y (NPY). Orexin-A was administered intracerebroventricularly and food intake measured in wild-type, histamine H(1)-receptor knockout or histidine decarboxylase knockout mice. Additionally, we administered orexin-A to wild-type mice with pharmacologically blocked H(1)-receptors or pharmacologically stimulated autoinhibitory H(3)-receptors. By quantitative real-time PCR we measured the effect of orexin-A on NPY mRNA expression in wild-type and knockout mice. Orexin-A dose-dependently stimulated food intake when administered to wild-type mice in doses up to 0.03 microg. Orexin-A in a dose of 0.01 microg increased food intake 10-fold in wild-type mice, whereas no increase in food intake was seen in either knockout mice or pharmacologically manipulated mice. Orexin-A increased NPY mRNA 4-fold in wild-type mice, whereas no change was observed in knockout mice. We conclude that the orexigenic effect of orexin-A is dependent on an intact histaminergic neuronal system and seems to involve an H(1)-receptor mechanism.
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