Association of cerebrospinal fluid NPY with peripheral ApoA: a moderation effect of BMI
Danyang Zhao, Xiaoli Han, Qingshuang Mu, Yan Wu, Ligang Shan, Lidong Su, Wenyan Wang, Pengxiang Wang, Yimin Kang, Fan Wang

TL;DR
This study shows that BMI affects how a brain peptide called NPY relates to a heart-healthy protein (ApoA-I), with different effects in normal weight and overweight/obese people.
Contribution
The study reveals that BMI moderates the relationship between cerebrospinal fluid NPY and peripheral ApoA-I levels, a previously undocumented finding.
Findings
In normal weight individuals, higher CSF NPY levels correlate with higher peripheral ApoA-I levels.
In overweight/obese individuals, higher CSF NPY levels correlate with lower peripheral ApoA-I levels.
BMI significantly moderates the association between CSF NPY and ApoA-I, with a strong effect size.
Abstract
Apoprotein A-I (ApoA-I) and Apoprotein B (ApoB) have emerged as novel cardiovascular risk biomarkers influenced by feeding behavior. Hypothalamic appetite peptides regulate feeding behavior and impact lipoprotein levels, which effects vary in different weight states. This study explores the intricate relationship between body mass index (BMI), hypothalamic appetite peptides, and apolipoproteins with emphasis on the moderating role of body weight in the association between neuropeptide Y (NPY), ghrelin, orexin A (OXA), oxytocin in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and peripheral ApoA-I and ApoB. In this cross-sectional study, we included participants with a mean age of 31.77 ± 10.25 years, categorized into a normal weight (NW) (n = 73) and an overweight/obese (OW/OB) (n = 117) group based on BMI. NPY, ghrelin, OXA, and oxytocin levels in CSF were measured. In the NW group, peripheral ApoA-I…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRegulation of Appetite and Obesity · Diet and metabolism studies · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
