Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor has been associated previously with the regulation of food intake. To help elucidate the role of this neurotrophin in weight regulation, we have generated conditional mutants in which
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
has been eliminated from the brain after birth through the use of the cre-loxP recombination system. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor conditional mutants were hyperactive after exposure to stressors and had higher levels of anxiety when evaluated in the light/dark exploration test. They also had mature onset
obesity
characterized by a dramatic 80-150% increase in body weight, increased linear growth, and elevated serum levels of leptin, insulin, glucose, and cholesterol. In addition, the mutants had an abnormal starvation response and elevated basal levels of POMC, an anorexigenic factor and the precursor for alpha-MSH. Our results demonstrate that brain derived neurotrophic factor has an essential maintenance function in the regulation of anxiety-related behavior and in food intake through central mediators in both the basal and fasted state.
...
PMID:Conditional deletion of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the postnatal brain leads to obesity and hyperactivity. 1157 7
Dietary restriction (DR) extends life span and improves glucose metabolism in mammals. Recent studies have shown that DR stimulates the production of
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(
BDNF
) in brain cells, which may mediate neuroprotective and neurogenic actions of DR. Other studies have suggested a role for central
BDNF
signaling in the regulation of glucose metabolism and body weight.
BDNF
heterozygous knockout (BDNF+/-) mice are obese and exhibit features of insulin resistance. We now report that an intermittent fasting DR regimen reverses several abnormal phenotypes of
BDNF
(+/-) mice including
obesity
, hyperphagia, and increased locomotor activity. DR increases
BDNF
levels in the brains of
BDNF
(+/-) mice to the level of wild-type mice fed ad libitum.
BDNF
(+/-) mice exhibit an insulin-resistance syndrome phenotype characterized by elevated levels of circulating glucose, insulin, and leptin; DR reduces levels of each of these three factors. DR normalizes blood glucose responses in glucose tolerance and insulin tolerance tests in the
BDNF
(+/-) mice. These findings suggest that
BDNF
is a major regulator of energy metabolism and that beneficial effects of DR on glucose metabolism are mediated, in part, by
BDNF
signaling. Dietary and pharmacological manipulations of
BDNF
signaling may prove useful in the prevention and treatment of
obesity
and insulin resistance syndrome-related diseases.
...
PMID:Reversal of behavioral and metabolic abnormalities, and insulin resistance syndrome, by dietary restriction in mice deficient in brain-derived neurotrophic factor. 1274 6
The melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) is critically involved in regulating energy balance, and
obesity
has been observed in mice with mutations in the gene for
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(
BDNF
). Here we report that
BDNF
is expressed at high levels in the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) where its expression is regulated by nutritional state and by MC4R signaling. In addition, similar to MC4R mutants, mouse mutants that expresses the
BDNF
receptor TrkB at a quarter of the normal amount showed hyperphagia and excessive weight gain on higher-fat diets. Furthermore,
BDNF
infusion into the brain suppressed the hyperphagia and excessive weight gain observed on higher-fat diets in mice with deficient MC4R signaling. These results show that MC4R signaling controls
BDNF
expression in the VMH and support the hypothesis that
BDNF
is an important effector through which MC4R signaling controls energy balance.
...
PMID:Brain-derived neurotrophic factor regulates energy balance downstream of melanocortin-4 receptor. 1283 Jan 51
In addition to their stimulatory action on neuronal differentiation and survival, the neurotrophins nerve growth factor (NGF) and
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(
BDNF
) improve glucose and lipid metabolism and control energy balance and feeding behavior. These latter activities are referred to here as the metabotrophic potential of neurotrophins. We recently reported that circulating NGF and
BDNF
levels are reduced in the metabolic syndrome and in acute coronary syndromes, and that the tissue content of NGF is reduced in atherosclerotic coronary arteries. Thus we hypothesize that a metabotrophic deficit due to reduction of neurotrophin availability may be implicated in the pathogenesis of
obesity
and related metabolic diseases, such as metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, and atherosclerosis. The metabotrophic deficit hypothesis also considers metabolism-related beneficial effects exerted by other neurotrophic factors, particularly ciliary neurotrophic factor, leukemia inhibitory factor, and bone morphogenetic proteins.
...
PMID:Metabotrophic potential of neurotrophins:implication in obesity and related diseases? 1452 35
Current evidence indicates that virtually all neuropsychiatric disorders, like many other common medical disorders, are genetically complex, with combined influences from multiple interacting genes, as well as from the environment. However, additive or epistatic gene interactions have proved quite difficult to detect and evaluate in human studies. Mouse phenotypes, including behaviors and drug responses, can provide relevant models for human disorders. Studies of gene-gene interactions in mice could thus help efforts to understand the molecular genetic bases of complex human disorders. The serotonin transporter (SERT, 5-HTT, SLC6A4) provides a relevant model for studying such interactions for several reasons: human variants in SERT have been associated with several neuropsychiatric and other medical disorders and quantitative traits; SERT blockers are effective treatments for a number of neuropsychiatric disorders; there is a good initial understanding of the phenotypic features of heterozygous and homozygous SERT knockout mice; and there is an expanding understanding of the interactions between variations in SERT expression and variations in the expression of a number of other genes of interest for neuropsychiatry and neuropharmacology. This paper provides examples of experimentally-obtained interactions between quantitative variations in SERT gene expression and variations in the expression of five other mouse genes: DAT, NET, MAOA, 5-HT(1B) and
BDNF
. In humans, all six of these genes possess polymorphisms that have been independently investigated as candidates for neuropsychiatric and other disorders in a total of > 500 reports. In the experimental studies in mice reviewed here, gene-gene interactions resulted in either synergistic, antagonistic (including 'rescue' or 'complementation') or more complex, quantitative alterations. These were identified in comparisons of the behavioral, physiological and neurochemical phenotypes of wildtype mice vs. mice with single allele or single gene targeted disruptions and mice with partial or complete disruptions of multiple genes. Several of the descriptive phenotypes could be best understood on the basis of intermediate, quantitative alterations such as brain serotonin differences. We discuss the ways in which these interactions could provide models for studies of gene-gene interactions in complex human neuropsychiatric and other disorders to which SERT may contribute, including developmental disorders,
obesity
, polysubstance abuse and others.
...
PMID:Experimental gene interaction studies with SERT mutant mice as models for human polygenic and epistatic traits and disorders. 1465 7
Mice deficient in
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(
BDNF
) develop mature-onset
obesity
, primarily due to overeating. To gain insight into the mechanism of this hyperphagia, we characterized food intake, body weight, meal pattern, and meal microstructure in young and mature mice fed balanced or high-fat diets. Hyperphagia and
obesity
occurred in mature but not young
BDNF
mutants fed a balanced diet. This hyperphagia was mediated by increased meal number, which was associated with normal meal size, meal duration, and satiety ratio. In contrast, the high-fat diet induced premature development of hyperphagia and
obesity
in young
BDNF
mutants and a similar magnitude hyperphagia in mature mutants. This hyperphagia was supported by increased meal size and was accompanied by a reduced satiety ratio. Thus the mechanism underlying hyperphagia was present before significant weight gain, but whether it occurred, and whether meal frequency or meal size was altered to support it, was modulated by a process associated with aging and by diet properties. Meal pattern changes associated with the balanced diet suggested meal initiation, and the oropharyngeal positive feedback that drives feeding, were enhanced and might have contributed to overeating in
BDNF
mutants, whereas negative feedback was normal. Consistent with this hypothesis, meal microstructure revealed that all hyperphagic mutant groups exhibited increased intake rates at meal onset. Therefore, the central nervous system targets of
BDNF
actions may include orosensory brain stem neurons that process and transmit positive feedback or forebrain neurons that modulate its strength.
...
PMID:A mechanism underlying mature-onset obesity: evidence from the hyperphagic phenotype of brain-derived neurotrophic factor mutants. 1514 55
Reduced levels of
BDNF
in mice cause
obesity
and behavioral abnormalities including increased aggression and hyperactivity. While it has been shown that the
obesity
is in part caused by increased food consumption it is still not clear whether defects in other mechanisms involved in the control of body weight homeostasis can also affect this phenotype. Here we report that mice with reduced levels of
BDNF
do not develop
obesity
and have normal blood glucose levels if fed over a prolonged period of time the amount of food that control mice usually consume. Thus, hyperphagia appears to be the primary cause of
obesity
development rather than changes in mechanisms controlling metabolism.
...
PMID:Control of hyperphagia prevents obesity in BDNF heterozygous mice. 1557 Jan 74
Eating disorders (ED), such as anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN), are complex psychiatric disorders where different genetic and environmental factors are involved. Several lines of evidence support that
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(
BDNF
) plays an essential role in eating behaviour and that alterations on this neurotrophic system participates in the susceptibility to both AN and BN. Accordingly, intraventricular administration of
BDNF
in rats determines food starvation and body weight loss, while
BDNF
or its specific receptor NTRK2 knockout mice develop
obesity
and hyperphagia. Case-control studies also suggest a
BDNF
contribution in the aetiology of ED: we have previously reported a strong association between the Met66 variant within the
BDNF
gene, restricting AN (ANR) and minimum body mass index (minBMI) in a Spanish sample, and a positive association between the Val66Met and -270C/T
BDNF
SNPs and ED in six different European populations. To replicate these results, avoiding population stratification effects, we recruited 453 ED trios from eight European centres and performed a family-based association study. Both haplotype relative risk (HRR) and haplotype-based haplotype relative risk (HHRR) methods showed a positive association between the Met66 allele and ANR. Consistently, we also observed an effect of the Met66 variant on low minBMI and a preferential transmission of the -270C/Met66 haplotype to the affected ANR offspring. These results support the involvement of
BDNF
in eating behaviour and further suggest its participation in the genetic susceptibility to ED, mainly ANR and low minBMI.
...
PMID:Association of BDNF with restricting anorexia nervosa and minimum body mass index: a family-based association study of eight European populations. 1565 4
Complex chromosome rearrangements (CCRs) are extremely rare but often associated with mental retardation, congenital anomalies, or recurrent spontaneous abortions. We report a de novo apparently balanced CCR involving chromosomes 3 and 12 and a two-way translocation between chromosomes 11 and 21 in a woman with mild intellectual disability,
obesity
, coarse facies, and apparent synophrys without other distinctive dysmorphia or congenital anomalies. Molecular analysis of breakpoints using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with region-specific BAC clones revealed a more complex character for the CCR. The rearrangement is a result of nine breaks and involves reciprocal translocation of terminal chromosome fragments 3p24.1-->pter and 12q23.1-->qter, insertion of four fragments of the long arm of chromosome 12: q14.1-->q21?, q21?-->q22, q22-->q23.1, and q23.1-->q23.1 and a region 3p22.3-->p24.1 into chromosome 3q26.31. In addition, we detected a approximately 0.5-Mb submicroscopic deletion at 3q26.31. The deletion involves the chromosome region that has been previously associated with Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) in which a novel gene NAALADL2 has been mapped recently. Other potential genes responsible for intellectual deficiency disrupted as a result of patient's chromosomal rearrangement map at 12q14.1 (TAFA2), 12q23.1 (METAP2), and 11p14.1 (
BDNF
).
...
PMID:Molecular analysis of a constitutional complex genome rearrangement with 11 breakpoints involving chromosomes 3, 11, 12, and 21 and a approximately 0.5-Mb submicroscopic deletion in a patient with mild mental retardation. 1616 Aug 54
Energy dense, high fat, high sugar, foods and beverages in our diet are a major contributor to the escalating global
obesity
problem. Here, we examine the physiological and neuroendocrine effects of feeding rats a solid high-energy (HE) diet with or without a liquid supplement (Ensure) and the consequence of subsequently transferring animals back to chow (C). Outbred Sprague-Dawley rats were fed C until 49-56 days of age, and then transferred a HE diet for 3 weeks before allocation to one of two weight-matched groups. Over the next 10 weeks, one group remained on HE diet, whereas the other had access to the liquid diet, chocolate Ensure (EN), in addition to HE diet (HE + EN). Half the rats from each group were then killed, and the remainder were returned to C for 3 weeks. Supplementation of the HE diet with EN accelerated weight gain and increased daily energy intake, adipose tissue mass, and circulating leptin levels. Transferring animals back to C caused a decrease in bodyweight in the HE + EN group, whereas HE animals were weight stable. Both groups also exhibited voluntary hypophagia, although the magnitude and duration of this response was greater in HE + EN animals. The only effect of Ensure on the hypothalamic genes studied was on tyrosine kinase B expression in the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMH), which was increased in rats given the supplement. Withdrawal of the obesogenic diets decreased gene expression for cocaine-and-amphetamine regulated transcript (CART) and dynorphin (DYN) in the arcuate nucleus (ARC), and DYN and
brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(
BDNF
) in the VMH, whereas neuropeptide Y (NPY) gene expression in the ARC was increased. These changes were independent of previous dietary history. EN supplementation generates distinct physiological responses, yet has a minimal effect on hypothalamic neuropeptide or receptor gene expression, possibly due to the development of leptin resistance. Withdrawal of obesogenic diets induces changes in the gene expression consistent with NPY, CART and
BDNF
attempting to oppose weight gain on either HE or HE + EN.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic energy balance gene responses in the Sprague-Dawley rat to supplementation of high-energy diet with liquid ensure and subsequent transfer to chow. 1621 99
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>