Neuropeptide Y inhibits chromaffin cell nicotinic receptor- stimulated tyrosine hydroxylase activity through a receptor-linked G protein-mediated process.
Acetylcholine stimulation of bovine chromaffin cells results in increased norepinephrine and epinephrine secretion accompanied by a corresponding increase in synthesis. The addition of neuropeptide Y ( NPY) to the culture medium prevents the increase in catecholamine synthesis but not secretion. Treatment of chromaffin cells with nicotine produces a concentration-dependent increase in tyrosine hydroxylase activity (IC50 = 1.2 microM) that is reduced if NPY is present during stimulation. Tyrosine hydroxylase activity decreases in a concentration-dependent fashion if increasing amounts of NPY are included in the culture medium, IC50 = 0.2 nM. Treatment with pertussis toxin completely prevents the effect of NPY. The rank order of potency for inhibition of tyrosine hydroxylase activity is NPY > or = [Leu31,Pro34]NPY > or = peptide YY > NPY2-36 > NPY13-36 > NPY18-36 > or = NPY26-36 >> NPY1-30, suggesting a NPY-Y1 receptor subtype. Examination of the effect of NPY on nicotine stimulation of chromaffin cell protein phosphorylation showed that NPY produces a concentration-dependent decrease in a 60-kDa protein, IC50 = 6.4 nM. The effect of NPY is pertussis toxin-sensitive. The rank order of potency is [Leu31,Pro34]NPY > or = NPY >> NPY18-36. Immunoprecipitation confirmed the identity of the 60-kDa protein as tyrosine hydroxylase.[1]References
- Neuropeptide Y inhibits chromaffin cell nicotinic receptor-stimulated tyrosine hydroxylase activity through a receptor-linked G protein-mediated process. Zheng, J., Zhang, P., Hexum, T.D. Mol. Pharmacol. (1997) [Pubmed]
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