Brain circuits regulating energy homeostasis
- PMID: 18514925
- PMCID: PMC2605273
- DOI: 10.1016/j.regpep.2007.10.006
Brain circuits regulating energy homeostasis
Abstract
Recent years have seen an impetus in the study for central mechanisms regulating energy balance, and caloric intake possibly as a response to the obesity pandemic. This renewed interest as well as drastic improvements in the tools that are now currently available to neuroscientists, has yielded a great deal of insight into the mechanisms by which the brain regulates metabolic function, and volitional aspects of feeding in response to metabolic signals like leptin, insulin and ghrelin. Among these mechanisms are the complex intracellular signals elicited by these hormones in neurons. Moreover, these signals produce and modulate the metabolism of the cell at the level of the mitochondria. Finally, these signals promote plastic changes that alter the synaptic circuitry in a number of circuits and ultimately affect cellular, physiological and behavioral responses in defense of energy homeostasis. These mechanisms are surveyed in this review.
References
-
- Brobeck JR. Mechanisms of the development of obesity in animals with hypothalamic lesions. Physiological Reviews. 1946;26:541–559. - PubMed
-
- Hetherington AW, Ranson SW. Hypothalamic lesions and adipocity in the rat. Anatomical Record. 1940;78:149.
-
- Hetherington AW, Ranson SW. The relation of various hypothalamic lesions to adiposity in the rat. Journal of Comparative Neurology. 1942;76:475–499.
-
- Anand BK, Brobeck JR. Localization of a feeding center in the hypothalamus of the rat. Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 1951;77:323–324. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
