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SLEEP AND TEMPERATURE REGULATION
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, California
Submitted 14 August 2007 ; accepted in final form 1 November 2007
Siberian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus) undergo bouts of daily torpor during which body temperature decreases by as much as 20°C and provides a significant savings in energy expenditure. Natural torpor in this species is normally triggered by winterlike photoperiods and low ambient temperatures. Intracerebroventricular injection of neuropeptide Y (NPY) reliably induces torporlike hypothermia that resembles natural torpor. NPY-induced torporlike hypothermia is also produced by intracerebroventricular injections of an NPY Y1 receptor agonist but not by injections of an NPY Y5 receptor agonist. In this research, groups of cold-acclimated Siberian hamsters were either coinjected with a Y1 receptor antagonist (1229U91) and NPY or were coinjected with a Y5 receptor antagonist (CGP71683) and NPY in counterbalanced designs. Paired vehicle + NPY induced torporlike hypothermia in 92% of the hamsters, whereas coinjection of Y1 antagonist + NPY induced torporlike hypothermia in 4% of the hamsters. In contrast, paired injections of vehicle + NPY and Y5 antagonist + NPY induced torporlike hypothermia in 100% and 91% of the hamsters, respectively. Although Y5 antagonist treatment alone had no effect on body temperature, Y1 antagonist injections produced hyperthermia compared with controls. Both Y1 antagonist and Y5 antagonist injections significantly reduced food ingestion 24 h after treatment. We conclude that activation of NPY 1 receptors is both sufficient and necessary for NPY-induced torporlike hypothermia.
hyperthermia; thermoregulation; peptides
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