Elevated hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) expression is found in several rodent genetic models of obesity, but any association in nongenetic models of obesity is unclear. Consequently, we have measured NPY mRNA levels in the ventromedial hypothalamus of a well-characterized model of obesity, the gold thioglucose (GTG)-injected mouse. Fourteen days after injection (early stage), animals were hyperphagic but not obese, hyperglycemic, or overtly hyperinsulinemic. Ten weeks after treatment (late stage), animals were obese, markedly hyperinsulinemic, and hyperglycemic. In both the early and late stages, NPY mRNA levels were reduced in the arcuate nucleus of GTG-injected animals. Although overnight fasting doubled NPY mRNA levels in control animals, there was no change at either stage in GTG-injected animals. NPY mRNA levels in the deep layers of the cerebral cortex and in the dentate gyrus were not affected by GTG treatment or overnight fasting. We conclude that GTG treatment reduces the expression of NPY mRNA in the arcuate nucleus and that, therefore, increased hypothalamic NPY expression is unlikely to be an important factor causing the obesity and other metabolic changes found in this model.