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Dive into the research topics where Nina Semjonous is active.

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Featured researches published by Nina Semjonous.


International Journal of Obesity | 2009

Coordinated changes in energy intake and expenditure following hypothalamic administration of neuropeptides involved in energy balance

Nina Semjonous; Kirsty L. Smith; James R.C. Parkinson; David Jl Gunner; Yong-Ling Liu; Kevin G. Murphy; Mohammad A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom; Caroline J. Small

Objective:The hypothalamic control of energy balance is regulated by a complex network of neuropeptide-releasing neurons. Although the effect of these neuropeptides on individual aspects of energy homoeostasis has been studied, the coordinated response of these effects has not been comprehensively investigated. We have simultaneously monitored a number of metabolic parameters following intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of 1 and 3 nmol of neuropeptides with established roles in the regulation of feeding, activity and metabolism. Ad libitum- fed rats received the orexigenic neuropeptides neuropeptide Y (NPY), agouti-related protein (AgRP), melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) or orexin-A. Overnight-food-deprived rats received an ICV injection of the anorectic peptides α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH), corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) or neuromedin U (NMU).Results:Our results reveal the temporal sequence of the effects of these neuropeptides on both energy intake and expenditure, highlighting key differences in their function as mediators of energy balance. NPY and AgRP increased feeding and decreased oxygen consumption, with the effects of AgRP being more prolonged. In contrast, orexin-A increased both feeding and oxygen consumption, consistent with an observed increase in activity. The potent anorexigenic effects of CRF were accompanied by a prolonged increase in activity, whereas NMU injection resulted in significant but short-lasting inhibition of food intake, ambulatory activity and oxygen consumption. α-MSH injection resulted in significant increases in both ambulatory activity and oxygen consumption, and reduced food intake following administration of 3 nmol of the peptide.Conclusion:We have for the first time, simultaneously measured several metabolic parameters following hypothalamic administration of a number of neuropeptides within the same experimental system. This work has shown the interrelated effects of these neuropeotides on activity, energy expenditure and food intake, thus facilitating comparison between the different hypothalamic systems.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Relaxin-3 stimulates the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis

Barbara McGowan; Sarah Stanley; Joe Donovan; Emily L. Thompson; Michael Patterson; Nina Semjonous; James Gardiner; Kevin M. Murphy; M. A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom

The hypothalamus plays a key role in the regulation of both energy homeostasis and reproduction. Evidence suggests that relaxin-3, a recently discovered member of the insulin superfamily, is an orexigenic hypothalamic neuropeptide. Relaxin-3 is thought to act in the brain via the RXFP3 receptor, although the RXFP1 receptor may also play a role. Relaxin-3, RXFP3, and RXFP1 are present in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus, an area with a well-characterized role in the regulation of energy balance that also modulates reproductive function by providing inputs to hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons. Other members of the relaxin family are known to play a role in the regulation of reproduction. However, the effects of relaxin-3 on reproductive function are unknown. We studied the role of relaxin-3 in the regulation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis. Intracerebroventricular (5 nmol) and intraparaventricular (540–1,620 pmol) administration of human relaxin-3 (H3) in adult male Wistar rats significantly increased plasma luteinizing hormone (LH) 30 min postinjection. This effect was blocked by pretreatment with a peripheral GnRH antagonist. Central administration of human relaxin-2 showed no significant effect on plasma LH. H3 dose-dependently stimulated the release of GnRH from hypothalamic explants and GT1-7 cells, which express RXFP1 and RXFP3, but did not influence LH or follicle-stimulating hormone release from pituitary fragments in vitro. We have demonstrated a novel role for relaxin-3 in the stimulation of the HPG axis, putatively via hypothalamic GnRH neurons. Relaxin-3 may act as a central signal linking nutritional status and reproductive function.


Endocrinology | 2012

Lack of Significant Metabolic Abnormalities in Mice with Liver-Specific Disruption of 11β-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1.

Gareth G. Lavery; Agnieszka Zielinska; Laura Gathercole; Beverly Hughes; Nina Semjonous; Phillip Guest; Khalid Saqib; Mark Sherlock; Gary M. Reynolds; Stuart Morgan; Jeremy W. Tomlinson; Elizabeth A. Walker; Elizabeth Rabbitt; Paul M. Stewart

Glucocorticoids (GC) are implicated in the development of metabolic syndrome, and patients with GC excess share many clinical features, such as central obesity and glucose intolerance. In patients with obesity or type 2 diabetes, systemic GC concentrations seem to be invariably normal. Tissue GC concentrations determined by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and local cortisol (corticosterone in mice) regeneration from cortisone (11-dehydrocorticosterone in mice) by the 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD1) enzyme, principally expressed in the liver. Transgenic mice have demonstrated the importance of 11β-HSD1 in mediating aspects of the metabolic syndrome, as well as HPA axis control. In order to address the primacy of hepatic 11β-HSD1 in regulating metabolism and the HPA axis, we have generated liver-specific 11β-HSD1 knockout (LKO) mice, assessed biomarkers of GC metabolism, and examined responses to high-fat feeding. LKO mice were able to regenerate cortisol from cortisone to 40% of control and had no discernible difference in a urinary metabolite marker of 11β-HSD1 activity. Although circulating corticosterone was unaltered, adrenal size was increased, indicative of chronic HPA stimulation. There was a mild improvement in glucose tolerance but with insulin sensitivity largely unaffected. Adiposity and body weight were unaffected as were aspects of hepatic lipid homeostasis, triglyceride accumulation, and serum lipids. Additionally, no changes in the expression of genes involved in glucose or lipid homeostasis were observed. Liver-specific deletion of 11β-HSD1 reduces corticosterone regeneration and may be important for setting aspects of HPA axis tone, without impacting upon urinary steroid metabolite profile. These discordant data have significant implications for the use of these biomarkers of 11β-HSD1 activity in clinical studies. The paucity of metabolic abnormalities in LKO points to important compensatory effects by HPA activation and to a crucial role of extrahepatic 11β-HSD1 expression, highlighting the contribution of cross talk between GC target tissues in determining metabolic phenotype.


International Journal of Obesity | 2008

The effects of pancreatic polypeptide on locomotor activity and food intake in mice

Y.-L. Liu; Nina Semjonous; Kevin G. Murphy; M. A. Ghatei; S.R. Bloom

Pancreatic polypeptide (PP) has been shown to inhibit food intake in both rodents and humans. Acute peripheral administration of PP increases oxygen consumption in obese mice. To further investigate the function of PP in the modulation of energy balance, we examined its effects on spontaneous locomotor activity and food intake in mice by using a 24-chamber Comprehensive Laboratory Animal Monitoring System. Effects of intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of PP on spontaneous locomotor activity were measured using the optical beam technique. Administration of PP dose dependently inhibited cumulative food intake. The inhibition remained significant for up to 6, 17 and 36 h at doses of 30, 100 and 300 nmol kg−1 PP, respectively. At 10 nmol kg−1, PP increased locomotor activity (cumulative beam breaks) significantly for 4 h following administration without affecting food intake and at 30 nmol kg−1, PP increased locomotor activity by 79% compared with the controls for 5 h post injection. However, at 100 and 300 nmol kg−1, PP had no significant effect on locomotor activity. This study shows for the first time that PP increases spontaneous locomotor activity in mice.


Regulatory Peptides | 2011

Intracerebroventricular administration of vasoactive intestinal peptide inhibits food intake.

Samar Ghourab; Kylie Beale; Nina Semjonous; Katherine Anne Simpson; Niamh M. Martin; Mohammad A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom; Kirsty L. Smith

Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is a 28 amino acid peptide expressed throughout the peripheral and central nervous systems. VIP and the VIP receptor VPAC(2)R are expressed in hypothalamic nuclei involved in the regulation of energy homeostasis. VIP has been shown to be involved in the regulation of energy balance in a number of non-mammalian vertebrates. We therefore examined the effects of intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of VIP on food intake, energy expenditure and activity in adult male Wistar rats. VIP administration caused a potent short lived decrease in food intake and an increase in activity and energy expenditure. The pathways potentially involved in the anorexigenic effects of VIP were investigated by measuring the release of neuropeptides involved in the regulation of food intake from hypothalamic explants treated with VIP. VIP significantly stimulated the release of the anorexigenic peptide alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (αMSH). These studies suggest that VIP may have an endogenous role in the hypothalamic control of energy homeostasis.


Endocrinology | 2005

Peptide YY3–36 and Glucagon-Like Peptide-17–36 Inhibit Food Intake Additively

Nicola M. Neary; Caroline J. Small; Maralyn Druce; Adrian Park; Sandra M. Ellis; Nina Semjonous; Catherine Louise Dakin; Karin Filipsson; Fang Wang; Aysha Kent; Gary Frost; Mohammad A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom


Endocrinology | 2006

Neuropeptide S stimulates the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis and inhibits food intake.

Kirsty L. Smith; Michael Patterson; Waljit S. Dhillo; Sejal R. Patel; Nina Semjonous; James Gardiner; Mohammad A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom


Endocrinology | 2006

Neuromedin U Partially Mediates Leptin-Induced Hypothalamo-Pituitary Adrenal (HPA) Stimulation and Has a Physiological Role in the Regulation of the HPA Axis in the Rat

Preeti H. Jethwa; Kirsty L. Smith; Caroline J. Small; Caroline R. Abbott; Sarah J. Darch; Kevin G. Murphy; Asha Seth; Nina Semjonous; Sejal R. Patel; Jeannie Todd; Mohammad A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom


Archive | 2012

1 and H6PDH 2

Lianne Abrahams; Nina Semjonous; Phil Guest; Agnieszka Zielinska; Beverly Hughes; Gareth Lavery; Paul Stewart


Archive | 2011

Hepatic 11[beta]-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 expression is dynamically related across the liver lobule and is linked to metabolic status

Adeeba Ahmed; Nina Semjonous; Elizabeth Rabbitt; Paul Stewart

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Paul Stewart

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Beverly Hughes

University of Birmingham

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Gareth Lavery

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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