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Query: UMLS:C0020175 (
hunger
)
5,670
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
) is expressed in a large neuronal population of the rat lateral hypothalamus. This area is known to be implicated in the regulation of thirst and
hunger
and to contain glucose-sensitive cells. In the present study, we investigated the effects of goldthioglucose (GTG), a toxic form of glucose, on the expression of the
MCH
gene in the rat lateral hypothalamus by immunocytochemistry, in situ hybridization and competitive RT-PCR. We observed that the
MCH
immunoreactivity and the level of
MCH
mRNA were not changed after intraperitoneal GTG injection (0.35 mg/g body weight). These results together with previous data suggest that the glucose-sensitive cells of the lateral hypothalamus are different from the
MCH
neurons and remain to be identified.
...
PMID:Exploring the expression of the melanin-concentrating hormone messenger RNA in the rat lateral hypothalamus after goldthioglucose injection. 917 65
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is thought to play a crucial role in the normal hypothalamic response to starvation. After a period of food restriction, increased release of NPY induces
hunger
and hyperphagia, and helps to restore body weight to its set point. Persistent anorexia in rats with experimental colitis implies failure of this adaptive feeding response. In vivo NPY release and regional hypothalamic NPY concentrations were measured in rats with trinitrobenzenesulphonic acid (TNBS)-induced colitis, healthy controls and animals pair-fed to match the food intake of the colitic group. Food intake in the colitic group was assessed after administration of NPY and two other potent orexigenic peptides:
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
) and hypocretin (orexin-A). Food intake was decreased by 30-80% below control values for 5 days in the colitic rats. In both the pair-fed and colitic groups, release of NPY in the paraventricular nucleus was significantly increased compared with free-feeding controls. Intraventricular or intrahypothalamic administration of NPY,
MCH
or hypocretin elicited a feeding response in healthy controls, but not in the colitic group. In summary, animals with TNBS-colitis and anorexia show an appropriate increase in hypothalamic NPYergic activity. However, the failure of NPY and other orexigenic peptides to increase feeding in the colitic group indicates suppression of feeding, either by inhibition of a common downstream hypothalamic neuronal pathway or by induction of one or more potent anorexigenic agents.
...
PMID:Role of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y and orexigenic peptides in anorexia associated with experimental colitis in the rat. 1117 Dec 92
A chronic minor imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure may lead to obesity. Both lean and obese subjects eventually reach energy balance and their body weight regulation implies that the adipose tissue mass is "sensed", leading to appropriate responses of energy intake and energy expenditure. The cloning of the ob gene and the identification of its encoded protein, leptin, have provided a system signaling the amount of adipose energy stores to the brain. Leptin, a hormone secreted by fat cells, acts in rodents via hypothalamic receptors to inhibit feeding and increase thermogenesis. A feedback regulatory loop with three distinct steps has been identified: (1) a sensor (leptin production by adipose cells) monitors the size of the adipose tissue mass; (2) hypothalamic centers receive and integrate the intensity of the leptin signal through leptin receptors (LRb); (3) effector systems, including the sympathetic nervous system, control the two main determinants of energy balance-energy intake and energy expenditure. While this feedback regulatory loop is well established in rodents, there are many unsolved questions about its applicability to body weight regulation in humans. The rate of leptin production is related to adiposity, but a large portion of the interindividual variability in plasma leptin concentration is independent of body fatness. Gender is an important factor determining plasma leptin, with women having markedly higher leptin concentrations than men for any given degree of fat mass. The ob mRNA expression is also upregulated by glucocorticoids, whereas stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system results in its inhibition. Furthermore, leptin is not a satiety factor in humans because changes in food intake do not induce short-term increases in plasma leptin levels. After its binding to LRb in the hypothalamus, leptin stimulates a specific signaling cascade that results in the inhibition of several orexigenic neuropeptides, while stimulating several anorexigenic peptides. The orexigenic neuropeptides that are downregulated by leptin are NPY (neuropeptide Y),
MCH
(
melanin-concentrating hormone
), orexins, and AGRP (agouti-related peptide). The anorexigenic neuropeptides that are upregulated by leptin are alpha-MSH (alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone), which acts on MC4R (melanocortin-4 receptor); CART (cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript); and CRH (corticotropin-releasing-hormone). Obese humans have high plasma leptin concentrations related to the size of adipose tissue, but this elevated leptin signal does not induce the expected responses (i.e., a reduction in food intake and an increase in energy expenditure). This suggests that obese humans are resistant to the effects of endogenous leptin. This resistance is also shown by the lack of effect of exogenous leptin administration to induce weight loss in obese patients. The mechanisms that may account for leptin resistance in human obesity include a limitation of the blood-brain-barrier transport system for leptin and an inhibition of the leptin signaling pathways in leptin-responsive hypothalamic neurons. During periods of energy deficit, the fall in leptin plasma levels exceeds the rate at which fat stores are decreased. Reduction of the leptin signal induces several neuroendocrine responses that tend to limit weight loss, such as
hunger
, food-seeking behavior, and suppression of plasma thyroid hormone levels. Conversely, it is unlikely that leptin has evolved to prevent obesity when plenty of palatable foods are available because the elevated plasma leptin levels resulting from the increased adipose tissue mass do not prevent the development of obesity. In conclusion, in humans, the leptin signaling system appears to be mainly involved in maintenance of adequate energy stores for survival during periods of energy deficit. Its role in the etiology of human obesity is only demonstrated in the very rare situations of absence of the leptin signal (mutations of the leptin gene or of the leptin receptor gene), which produces an internal perception of starvation and results in a chronic stimulation of excessive food intake.
...
PMID:Leptin signaling, adiposity, and energy balance. 1207 65
A wide spectrum of diseases, as well as states of attenuated ability to heal and recover, can be traced to over- or underweight. Patients at the extremes of the energy balance spectrum are becoming more and more common. In order to provide adequate care for such patients an understanding of the mechanisms governing feeding behaviour is required. In the last decade, important advances have been made in this direction, as several factors mediating signals of
hunger
and satiety to and within the brain have been identified. These factors include hormonal signals (such as leptin and insulin) from the energy stores as well as neuronal influences (via the vagus nerve) from the digestive tract. The information encoded therein is routed to specific nuclei of the hypothalamus and brain stem, respectively, leading to activation of complex neuronal networks spanning the most rostral regions of the brain all the way to the effector neurones of the autonomic nervous system located in the spinal cord. Several recently characterized neuropeptides showing potent stimulation of appetite (neuropeptide Y, agouti gene-related peptide, orexin,
melanin-concentrating hormone
) and satiety (melanocortins, cholecystokinin, cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript) have been localized to these pathways. These peptides, and the mechanisms through which they operate, offer promise for new therapeutic strategies in the treatment of obesity and anorexia.
...
PMID:[Peptides are opening the door for novel treatments of obesity and loss of appetite]. 1252 88
The hypothalamus and other brain regions that control energy homeostasis contain neuronal populations that produce specific neuropeptides which have experimental effects on feeding behavior and body weight. Here, we describe examples of neuropeptides that exert 'anabolic' effects, notably stimulation of feeding and increased body weight. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) are inhibited by leptin and insulin, and thus are stimulated in states of energy deficit and fat loss, e.g., underfeeding. NPY neuronal overactivity contributes to enhanced
hunger
and food-seeking activity under these conditions. The lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) contains specific neuronal populations that affect feeding in different ways. Neurons expressing the appetite-stimulating peptide orexin A are stimulated by starvation (but not food restriction) and by hypoglycemia, but only if food is withheld. Orexin neurons are apparently activated by low glucose but are promptly inhibited by visceral feeding signals, probably mediated via vagal sensory pathway and the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS); a short-term role in initiating feeding seems most likely. Other LHA neurons express
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
), which transiently increases food intake when injected centrally.
MCH
neurons may be regulated by leptin, insulin and glucose. Glucose-sensing neurons in the hypothalamus and elsewhere are sensitive to other cues of nutritional state, including visceral satiety signals (transmitted via the vagus) and orexin A. Thus, long- and short-term humoral and neural signals interact with each other to meet diverse nutritional needs, and anabolic neuropeptides are important in the overall integration of energy homeostasis. Clarifying the underlying mechanisms will be essential to understanding normal energy balance and the pathogenesis and treatment of disorders, such as obesity and cachexia.
...
PMID:Anabolic neuropeptides. 1515 68
Appetite regulation is part of a feedback system that controls the energy balance, involving a complex interplay of
hunger
and satiety signals, produced in the hypothalamus as well as in peripheral organs.
Hunger
signals may be generated in peripheral organs (e.g. ghrelin) but most of them are expressed in the hypothalamus (neuropeptide Y, orexins, agouti-related peptide,
melanin concentrating hormone
, endogenous opiates and dopamine) and are expressed during situations of energy deficiency. Some satiety signals, such as cholecystokinin, glucagon-like peptide 1, peptide YY and enterostatin are released from the digestive tract in response to food intake. Others, such as leptin and insulin, are mobilized in response to perturbations in the nutritional state. Still others are generated in neurones of the hypothalamus (alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone and serotonin). Satiety signals act by inhibiting the expression of
hunger
signals and/or by blunting their effect. Palatable food, i.e. food rich in fat and sugar, up-regulates the expression of
hunger
signals and satiety signals, at the same time blunting the response to satiety signals and activating the reward system. Hence, palatable food offsets normal appetite regulation, which may explain the increasing problem of obesity worldwide.
...
PMID:How palatable food disrupts appetite regulation. 1599 51
The rising tide of obesity is one of the most pressing health issues of our time, yet existing medicines to combat the problem are disappointingly limited in number and effectiveness. Fortunately, a recent burgeoning of mechanistic insights into the neuroendocrine regulation of body weight provides an expanding list of molecular targets for novel, rationally designed antiobesity pharmaceuticals. In this review, we articulate a set of conceptual principles that we feel could help prioritize among these molecules in the development of obesity therapeutics, based on an understanding of energy homeostasis. We focus primarily on central targets, highlighting selected strategies to stimulate endogenous catabolic signals or inhibit anabolic signals. Examples of the former approach include methods to enhance central leptin signaling through intranasal leptin delivery, use of superpotent leptin-receptor agonists, and mechanisms to increase leptin sensitivity by manipulating SOCS-3, PTP-1B, ciliary neurotrophic factor, or simply by first losing weight with traditional interventions. Techniques to augment signaling by neurochemical mediators of leptin action that lie downstream of at least some levels of obesity-associated leptin resistance include activation of melanocortin receptors or 5-HT2C and 5-HT1B receptors. We also describe strategies to inhibit anabolic molecules, such as neuropeptide Y,
melanin-concentrating hormone
, ghrelin, and endocannabinoids. Modulation of gastrointestinal satiation and
hunger
signals is discussed as well. As scientists continue to provide fundamental insights into the mechanisms governing body weight, the future looks bright for development of new and better antiobesity medications to be used with diet and exercise to facilitate substantial weight loss.
...
PMID:Emerging therapeutic strategies for obesity. 1712 57
The prevalence of obesity in Spain is at 15.5% and its cost is at some 2,000 million Euro. The evolutionary response to
hunger
was to create mechanisms for storing energy using diverse hormones: insulin, leptin, ghrelin, resistin, neuropeptide Y, AgRS,
MCH
, the carbaminoid system, and so on. These served to maximize ingestion or to create resistance to insulin and leptin. A 'saving' genotype was thus created and registered in our genome, with energy savings and reduced expenditure. But with the availability of more foods without physical effort, this savings genotype is no longer valid, as it gives rise to the metabolic syndrome, with increased cardiovascular risk. Current treatments are rather ineffective; we need to adapt our lifestyles to the conditions for which we were designed. We have set up an Obesity School with a 13-hour program, completed by some 64% of those registered (20% do not attend), with an average weight loss at four months of 5.9 kgs and a reduction of 2.26% in body fat. At 6-12 months from the completion of the course, 60% continue losing (-10 kgs), with only 26.5% re-gaining weight (+4.75 kgs).
...
PMID:[Obesity, the price of survival]. 1769 Dec 1
The lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) participates in the integration of sensory information and somatomotor responses associated with
hunger
and thirst. Although the LHA is neurochemically heterogeneous, a particularly high number of cells express
melanin-concentrating hormone
(
MCH
), which has been reported to play a role in energy homeostasis. Treatment with
MCH
increases food intake, and
MCH
mRNA is overexpressed in leptin-deficient (ob/ob) mice. Mice lacking both
MCH
and leptin present reduced body fat, mainly due to increased resting energy expenditure and locomotor activity. Dense
MCH
innervation of the cerebral motor cortex (MCx) and the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPT), both related to motor function, has been reported. Therefore, we postulated that a specific group of
MCH
neurons project to these areas. To investigate our hypothesis, we injected retrograde tracers into the MCx and the PPT of rats, combined with immunohistochemistry. We found that 25% of the LHA neurons projecting to the PPT were immunoreactive for
MCH
, and that 75% of the LHA neurons projecting to the MCx also contained
MCH
. Few
MCH
neurons were found to send collaterals to both areas. We also found that 15% of the incerto-hypothalamic neurons projecting to the PPT expressed
MCH
immunoreactivity. Those neurons preferentially innervated the rostral PPT. In addition, we observed that the
MCH
neurons express glutamic acid decarboxylase mRNA, a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) synthesizing enzyme. We postulate that
MCH
/GABA neurons are involved in the inhibitory modulation of the innervated areas, decreasing motor activity in states of negative energy balance.
...
PMID:Melanin-concentrating hormone projections to areas involved in somatomotor responses. 1806 97
The ventrolateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BSTvl) receives direct input from two specific subpopulations of neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS). It is heavily innervated by aldosterone-sensitive NTS neurons, which are selectively activated by sodium depletion, and by the A2 noradrenergic neurons, which are activated by visceral and immune- and stress-related stimuli. Here, we used a retrograde neuronal tracer to identify other brain sites that innervate the BSTvl. Five general brain regions contained retrogradely labeled neurons: cerebral cortex (infralimbic and insular regions), rostral forebrain structures (subfornical organ, organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis, taenia tecta, nucleus accumbens, lateral septum, endopiriform nucleus, dorsal BST, substantia innominata, and, most prominently the amygdala--primarily its basomedial and central subnuclei), thalamus (central medial, intermediodorsal, reuniens, and, most prominently the paraventricular thalamic nucleus), hypothalamus (medial preoptic area, perifornical, arcuate, dorsomedial, parasubthalamic, and posterior hypothalamic nuclei), and brainstem (periaqueductal gray matter, dorsal and central superior raphe nuclei, parabrachial nucleus, pre-locus coeruleus region, NTS, and A1 noradrenergic neurons in the caudal ventrolateral medulla). In the arcuate hypothalamic nucleus, some retrogradely labeled neurons contained either agouti-related peptide or cocaine/amphetamine-regulated transcript. Of the numerous retrogradely labeled neurons in the perifornical hypothalamic area, few contained
melanin-concentrating hormone
or orexin. In the brainstem, many retrogradely labeled neurons were either serotoninergic or catecholaminergic. In summary, the BSTvl receives inputs from a variety of brain sites implicated in
hunger
, salt and water intake, stress, arousal, and reward.
...
PMID:Inputs to the ventrolateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. 1885 14
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