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Nutritive, Post-ingestive Signals Are the Primary Regulators of AgRP Neuron Activity.

Citation
Su, Z., et al. “Nutritive, Post-Ingestive Signals Are The Primary Regulators Of Agrp Neuron Activity.”. Cell Reports, pp. 2724-2736.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Zhenwei Su, Amber L Alhadeff, Nicholas Betley
Keywords AgRP neurons, CCK, PYY, amylin, Calcium imaging, calories, cholecystokinin, homeostasis, peptide tyrosine tyrosine, satiation signals, sensory regulation, single trial learning
Abstract

The brain regulates food intake by processing sensory cues and peripheral physiological signals, but the neural basis of this integration remains unclear. Hypothalamic, agouti-related protein (AgRP)-expressing neurons are critical regulators of food intake. AgRP neuron activity is high during hunger and is rapidly reduced by the sight and smell of food. Here, we reveal two distinct components of AgRP neuron activity regulation: a rapid but transient sensory-driven signal and a slower, sustained calorie-dependent signal. We discovered that nutrients are necessary and sufficient for sustained reductions in AgRP neuron activity and that activity reductions are proportional to the calories obtained. This change in activity is recapitulated by exogenous administration of gut-derived satiation signals. Furthermore, we showed that the nutritive value of food trains sensory systems-in a single trial-to drive rapid, anticipatory AgRP neuron activity inhibition. Together, these data demonstrate that nutrients are the primary regulators of AgRP neuron activity.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
21
Issue
10
Number of Pages
2724-2736
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2017.11.036
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
29212021
PMCID
PMC5724395
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