gastrin-releasing-peptide and Obesity

gastrin-releasing-peptide has been researched along with Obesity* in 9 studies

Reviews

2 review(s) available for gastrin-releasing-peptide and Obesity

ArticleYear
Biology and pharmacology of bombesin receptor subtype-3.
    Current opinion in endocrinology, diabetes, and obesity, 2012, Volume: 19, Issue:1

    This review summarizes the results of recent studies regarding the biology and pharmacology of novel synthetic agonists and antagonists of the bombesin receptor subtype-3 (BRS-3).. All three mammalian bombesin receptors including gastrin-releasing peptide receptor, the neuromedin B receptor, and the BRS-3 have been shown to regulate energy balance and appetite and satiety. Studies indicate that the orphan BRS-3 is an important regulator of body weight, energy expenditure, and glucose homeostasis. Endogenous bombesin-like peptides bombesin, gastrin-releasing peptide, and neuromedin B receptor do not bind to BRS-3 and the endogenous BRS-3 ligand remains unknown. The novel synthesis of selective, high-affinity BRS-3 agonists and antagonists has recently been accomplished and showed that BRS-3 regulates energy balance independent of other established pathways and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in the pancreatic islet cells. The availability of new BRS-3 selective agonists and antagonists will facilitate further elucidation of its role in energy homeostasis, and provides a potential approach for the pharmacological treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes.. The native ligand of the G protein-coupled BRS-3 has not been identified as of now. However, novel synthesis of small-molecule, high-affinity agonists and antagonists on the BRS-3 was used in the recent studies and demonstrated an important role of BRS-3 in the regulation of energy homeostasis and glucose metabolism.

    Topics: Animals; Appetite Depressants; Appetite Regulation; Blood Glucose; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Energy Metabolism; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Homeostasis; Humans; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Obesity; Receptors, Bombesin; Satiety Response; Signal Transduction

2012
[Enterostatin, galanin, and GRP].
    Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 2005, Volume: 63 Suppl 8

    Topics: Alzheimer Disease; Biomarkers; Carcinoma, Small Cell; Chromatography, Affinity; Colipases; Diabetes Mellitus; Diagnostic Techniques, Endocrine; Enzyme Precursors; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Feeding and Eating Disorders; Galanin; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Humans; Lung Neoplasms; Metabolic Diseases; Obesity; Protein Precursors; Radioimmunoassay; Reference Values; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; Specimen Handling

2005

Other Studies

7 other study(ies) available for gastrin-releasing-peptide and Obesity

ArticleYear
Augmented Responses to Ozone in Obese Mice Require IL-17A and Gastrin-Releasing Peptide.
    American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2018, Volume: 58, Issue:3

    Topics: Animals; Antibodies, Blocking; Chemokine CCL20; Chemokine CXCL1; Female; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Interleukin-17; Interleukin-23 Subunit p19; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Neutrophil Infiltration; Neutrophils; Obesity; Ozone; Receptors, Bombesin; Respiratory Hypersensitivity

2018
Combined gastrin releasing peptide-29 and glucagon like peptide-1 reduce body weight more than each individual peptide in diet-induced obese male rats.
    Neuropeptides, 2018, Volume: 67

    To test the hypothesis that gastrin releasing peptide-29 (GRP-29) combined with glucagon like peptide-1 (7-36) (GLP-1 (7-36)) reduce body weight (BW) more than each of the peptides given individually, we infused the two peptides (0.5nmol/kg each) in the aorta of free feeding, diet-induced obese (DIO) male Sprague Dawley rats once daily for 25days and measured BW. We found that GRP-29 and GLP-1 reduce BW, GRP-29 reduced it more than GLP-1 and GRP-29+GLP-1 reduce BW more than each peptide given alone. This reduction was accompanied by decrease 24-hour food intake (normal rat chow), meal size (MS), duration of first meal and number of meals, and increase latency to the first meal, intermeal interval (IMI) and satiety ratio (IMI/MS, amount of food consumed per a unit of time). Furthermore, the peptides and their combination decreased 24-hour glucose levels. In conclusion, GRP-29+GLP-1 reduce BW more than each of the peptides given individually.

    Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Diet; Eating; Feeding Behavior; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Glucagon-Like Peptide 1; Male; Obesity; Peptide Fragments; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley

2018
Involvement of Gastrin-Releasing Peptide Receptor in the Regulation of Adipocyte Differentiation in 3T3-L1 Cells.
    International journal of molecular sciences, 2018, Dec-10, Volume: 19, Issue:12

    Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP), a member of bombesin-like peptides, and its receptor (GRP-R) play an important role in various physiological and pathological conditions. In this work, we investigated the role of GRP-R on adipogenesis in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. The expression of GRP-R was significantly increased during the adipocyte differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells. The inhibition of GRP-R by the antagonist RC-3095 affected adipogenesis in 3T3-L1 cells, which reduced lipid accumulation and regulated the expression of adipogenic genes. Moreover, cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (CREB) directly bound to the GRP-R promoter upon exposure to adipogenic stimuli. The down-regulation of GRP-R by the knockdown of CREB inhibited adipocyte differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells. Together these results suggest that the regulation of GRP-R activity or expression has an influence on adipogenesis through regulating adipogenic related genes.

    Topics: 3T3-L1 Cells; Adipocytes; Adipogenesis; Adipose Tissue; Animals; Bombesin; Cell Differentiation; Cyclic AMP Response Element-Binding Protein; Diet, High-Fat; Down-Regulation; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Gene Knockdown Techniques; Mice; Obesity; Peptide Fragments; Rats; Receptors, Bombesin

2018
Infusion of exogenous cholecystokinin-8, gastrin releasing peptide-29 and their combination reduce body weight in diet-induced obese male rats.
    Appetite, 2017, 02-01, Volume: 109

    We hypothesized that exogenous gastrin releasing peptide-29 (GRP-29), cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8) and their combination reduce body weight (BW). To test this hypothesis, BW was measured in four groups of diet-induced obese (DIO) male rats infused in the aorta (close to the junctions of the celiac and cranial mesenteric arteries) with saline, CCK-8 (0.5 nmol/kg), GRP-29 (0.5 nmol/kg) and CCK-8+GRP-29 (0.5 nmol/kg each) once daily for a total of 23 days. We found that CCK-8, GRP-29 and CCK-8+GRP-29 reduce BW relative to saline control. In conclusion, CCK-8, GRP-29 and their combination reduce BW in the DIO rat model. If infused near their gastrointestinal sites of action CCK-8, GRP-29 and their combination may have a role in regulating BW.

    Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Cholecystokinin; Diet; Drug Therapy, Combination; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Gastrointestinal Agents; Infusions, Parenteral; Male; Obesity; Peptide Fragments; Rats; Weight Loss

2017
Obese and lean Zucker rats respond similarly to intraperitoneal administration of gastrin-releasing peptides.
    Peptides, 2014, Volume: 58

    The Zucker rat is an animal model used to study obesity and the control of food intake by various satiety peptides. The amphibian peptide bombesin (Bn) reduces cumulative food intake similarly in both obese and lean weanling Zucker rats. Here, we hypothesized that intraperitoneal (i.p) administration of gastrin-releasing peptides-10, -27 and -29 (GRP-10, GRP-27, GRP-29), which are the mammalian forms of Bn, would reduce first meal size (MS, 10% sucrose) and prolong the intermeal interval (IMI, time between first and second meals) similarly in obese and lean adult Zucker rats. To test this hypothesis, we administered GRP-10, GRP-27 and GRP-29 (0, 2.1, 4.1 and 10.3 nmol/kg) i.p. to obese and lean male Zucker rats (who were deprived of overnight food but not water) and then measured the first and second MS, IMI and satiety ratio (SR, IMI/MS). We found that in both obese and lean rats, all forms of GRP reduced the first MS, and in lean rats, they also decreased the second MS. Additionally, GRP-10 and GRP-29 prolonged the IMI in both obese and lean rats, but GRP-27 only prolonged it in lean rats. Finally, we found that all forms of GRP increased the SR in both obese and lean rats. In agreement with our hypothesis, we conclude that all forms of GRP reduce food intake in obese and lean adult Zucker rats similar to Bn in weanling rats.

    Topics: Animals; Eating; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Male; Obesity; Rats; Rats, Zucker; Time Factors

2014
Factors contributing to obesity in bombesin receptor subtype-3-deficient mice.
    Endocrinology, 2008, Volume: 149, Issue:3

    Mice with a targeted disruption of bombesin receptor subtype-3 (BRS-3 KO) develop hyperphagia, obesity, hypertension, and impaired glucose metabolism. However, the factors contributing to their phenotype have not been clearly established. To determine whether their obesity is a result of increased food intake or a defect in energy regulation, we matched the caloric intake of BRS-3 KO mice to wild-type (WT) ad libitum (ad lib)-fed controls over 21 wk. Although BRS-3 KO ad lib-fed mice were 29% heavier, the body weights of BRS-3 KO pair-fed mice did not differ from WT ad lib-fed mice. Pair-feeding BRS-3 KO mice normalized plasma insulin but failed to completely reverse increased adiposity and leptin levels. Hyperphagia in ad lib-fed KO mice was due to an increase in meal size without a compensatory decrease in meal frequency resulting in an increase in total daily food intake. An examination of neuropeptide Y, proopiomelanocortin, and agouti-related peptide gene expression in the arcuate nucleus revealed that BRS-3 KO mice have some deficits in their response to energy regulatory signals. An evaluation of the satiety effects of cholecystokinin, bombesin, and gastrin-releasing peptide found no differences in feeding suppression by these peptides. We conclude that hyperphagia is a major factor leading to increased body weight and hyperinsulinemia in BRS-3 KO mice. However, our finding that pair-feeding did not completely normalize fat distribution and plasma leptin levels suggests there is also a metabolic dysregulation that may contribute to, or sustain, their obese phenotype.

    Topics: Adiposity; Animals; Body Weight; Bombesin; Cholecystokinin; Eating; Energy Metabolism; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Glucose; Hyperinsulinism; Hyperphagia; Hypothalamus; Insulin; Leptin; Male; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Obesity; Receptors, Bombesin; Satiation; Weight Gain

2008
Substance P, neurokinin A, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and gastrin releasing peptide in the intestine and pancreas of spontaneously obese-diabetic mice.
    Regulatory peptides, 1986, Dec-30, Volume: 16, Issue:3-4

    The concentrations and contents of immunoreactive substance P (SP), neurokinin A (NKA), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) were measured in acid-ethanol extracts of intestine (duodenum-jejunum-ileum) and pancreas of C57BL/KsJ diabetes-obese (db/db) mice, Aston obese-hyperglycaemic (ob/ob) mice, and their respective lean controls. The intestinal concentration of GRP and pancreatic concentrations of VIP and GRP were 36-57% lower in lean Aston mice than lean C57BL/KsJ mice, indicating the influence of genetic background in control mice. Intestinal concentrations of SP and NKA were reduced by 19-33% in the db/db and ob/ob mutants compared with their lean controls, but the intestinal contents of these peptides were normal or greater than normal due to intestinal hypertrophy of the mutant mice. The intestinal VIP concentration was not altered, but the content was increased by 87% and 25% respectively in db/db and ob/ob mice, whereas the intestinal GRP concentration was reduced by 51% in ob/ob mice. Pancreatic concentrations and contents of NKA, VIP and GRP were similar in lean and db/db C57BL/KsJ mice. However, pancreatic concentrations and contents of VIP and GRP were reduced by 51-55% in ob/ob mice compared with their lean controls. The sensitivity of the present assay did not permit accurate determination of the low pancreatic concentrations of SP. The results suggest that the spontaneous ob/ob and db/db syndromes of obesity and diabetes in mice are associated with reduced intestinal concentrations of SP and NKA. The ob/ob mouse also exhibited reductions of intestinal GRP and pancreatic GRP and VIP concentrations. These changes in regulatory peptides may relate to abnormalities of intestinal and possibly pancreatic function in obese and diabetic mutant mice.

    Topics: Animals; Diabetes Mellitus; Gastrin-Releasing Peptide; Insulin; Insulin Secretion; Intestines; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Obese; Mutation; Neurokinin A; Neuropeptides; Obesity; Pancreas; Peptides; Substance P; Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide

1986