Abstract

Exposure of chicks to a high ambient temperature (HT) has previously been shown to increase neuropeptide Y (NPY) mRNA expression in the brain. Furthermore, it was found that NPY has anti‐stress functions in heat‐exposed fasted chicks. The aim of the study was to reveal the role of central administration of NPY on thermotolerance ability and the induction of heat‐shock protein (HSP) and NPY sub‐receptors (NPYSRs) in fasted chicks with the contribution of plasma metabolite changes. Six‐ or seven‐day‐old chicks were centrally injected with 0 or 375 pmol of NPY and exposed to either HT (35 ± 1°C) or control thermoneutral temperature (CT: 30 ± 1°C) for 60 min while fasted. NPY reduced body temperature under both CT and HT. NPY enhanced the brain mRNA expression of HSP‐70 and ‐90, as well as of NPYSRs‐Y5, ‐Y6, and ‐Y7, but not ‐Y1, ‐Y2, and ‐Y4, under CT and HT. A coinjection of an NPYSR‐Y5 antagonist (CGP71683) and NPY (375 pmol) attenuated the NPY‐induced hypothermia. Furthermore, central NPY decreased plasma glucose and triacylglycerol under CT and HT and kept plasma corticosterone and epinephrine lower under HT. NPY increased plasma taurine and anserine concentrations. In conclusion, brain NPYSR‐Y5 partially afforded protective thermotolerance in heat‐exposed fasted chicks. The NPY‐mediated reduction in plasma glucose and stress hormone levels and the increase in free amino acids in plasma further suggest that NPY might potentially play a role in minimizing heat stress in fasted chicks.

Highlights

  • Neuropeptide Y (NPY), a 36-amino acid peptide, is multifunctional (Malva et al 2012; Reichmann and Holzer2016)

  • A significant (P < 0.05) interaction between neuropeptide Y (NPY) and temperature was found for plasma corticosterone concentrations, indicating that they were increased in NPY-treated chicks under control thermoneutral temperature (CT), while this increment disappeared under high ambient temperature (HT) (Fig. 3C)

  • A significant (P < 0.05) interaction between NPY and temperature was found for plasma E, indicating that plasma E increased in control chicks under HT; this stress response disappeared in NPY-treated chicks (Fig. 3D)

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Summary

Introduction

Fasting has been shown to increase the expression of NPY in the chicken hypothalamus (Boswell et al 1999), and brain NPY has recently been found to increase with a decrease in food intake in heat-exposed chicks (Ito et al 2015) and broiler-type Taiwan country chickens (Tu et al 2016). Heat stress leads to an increase in body temperature (Chowdhury et al 2012) and a decrease in food intake and body weight gain (Chowdhury et al 2014). Central NPY stimulated food intake in chicks at control thermoneutral temperature (CT) and HT (Bahry et al 2017).

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