AI Article Synopsis

  • Estradiol impacts feeding behavior in humans and animals, particularly during menopause, by influencing two key peptides in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus that have opposing effects on appetite.
  • Research using ovariectomized rats and 17β-estradiol benzoate (EB) treatment shows that EB administration reduces food intake and body weight while altering levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY) and α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH) in the arcuate nucleus.
  • The findings indicate that estradiol modulates food intake and body weight through a mechanism that balances the actions of NPY and α-MSH, highlighting its significance in managing appetite regulation in female rats.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Feeding behavior in both animals and humans is modulated by estrogens, as shown by the increased adiposity observed in women and rats upon the drop of estradiol levels at menopause. Estradiol action on food intake is mediated through its cognate receptors within several hypothalamic nuclei, namely the arcuate nucleus (ARN). The ARN contains two neuronal populations expressing peptides that exert opposing effects on the central control of feeding: the orexigenic neuropeptide Y (NPY) and the anorexigenic α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH).

Methods: To understand the role played by estradiol in the modulation of food intake, we have used an animal model of cyclic 17β-estradiol benzoate (EB) administration and stereological methods to estimate the total number of neurons immunoreactive for NPY and α-MSH in the ARN of ovariectomized rats.

Results: Present results show that the experimentally induced EB cyclicity prompted a decrease in food consumption and in body weight. Data also show that ovariectomy induced an increase in NPY expression and a decrease in α-MSH expression in the ARN that were reverted by EB administration. Conversely, EB blocked the expression of NPY and increased the synthesis of α-MSH in ARN neurons, without affecting the overall sum of NPY and α-MSH neurons.

Discussion: These results suggest that estradiol affects food intake and, consequently, body weight gain, through an overriding mechanism superimposed in the physiological balance between both peptides in the ARN of female rats.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01616412.2016.1203124DOI Listing

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