NPY and stress 30 years later: the peripheral view

D Hirsch, Z Zukowska - Cellular and molecular neurobiology, 2012 - Springer
D Hirsch, Z Zukowska
Cellular and molecular neurobiology, 2012Springer
Almost 30 years ago, neuropeptide Y (NPY) was discovered as a sympathetic co-transmitter
and one of the most evolutionarily conserved peptides abundantly present all over the body.
Soon afterward, NPY's multiple receptors were characterized and cloned, and the peptide's
role in stress was first documented. NPY has proven to be pivotal for maintaining many
stress responses. Most notably, NPY is known for activating long-lasting vasoconstriction in
many vascular beds, including coronary arteries. More recently, NPY was found to play a …
Abstract
Almost 30 years ago, neuropeptide Y (NPY) was discovered as a sympathetic co-transmitter and one of the most evolutionarily conserved peptides abundantly present all over the body. Soon afterward, NPY’s multiple receptors were characterized and cloned, and the peptide’s role in stress was first documented. NPY has proven to be pivotal for maintaining many stress responses. Most notably, NPY is known for activating long-lasting vasoconstriction in many vascular beds, including coronary arteries. More recently, NPY was found to play a role in stress-induced accretion of adipose tissue which many times can lead to detrimental metabolic changes. It is however due to its prominent actions in the brain, one of which is its powerful ability to stimulate appetite as well as its anxiolytic activities that NPY became a peptide of importance in neuroscience. In contrast, its actions in the rest of the body, including its role as a stress mediator, remained, surprisingly underappreciated and not well understood. Our research has focused on that other, “peripheral” side of NPY. In this review, we will discuss those actions of NPY on the cardiovascular system and metabolism, as they relate to adaptation to stress, and attempt to both distinguish NPY’s effects from and integrate them with the effects of the classical stress mediators, glucocorticoids, and catecholamines. To limit the bias of someone (ZZ) who has viewed the world of stress through the eyes of NPY for over 20 years, fresh insight (DH) has been solicited to more objectively assess NPY’s contributions to stress-related diseases and the body’s ability to adapt to stress.
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