Feeding behaviour is influenced by two primary factors: homoeostatic needs driven by hunger and hedonic desires for pleasure even in the absence of hunger. While efficient homoeostatic feeding is vital for survival, excessive hedonic feeding can lead to adverse consequences such as obesity and metabolic dysregulations. However, the neurobiological mechanisms that orchestrate homoeostatic versus hedonic food consumption remain largely unknown. Here we show that GABAergic proenkephalin (Penk) neurons in the diagonal band of Broca (DBB) of male mice respond to food presentation. We further demonstrate that a subset of DBB(Penk) neurons that project to the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus are preferentially activated upon food presentation during fasting periods and transmit a positive valence to facilitate feeding. On the other hand, a separate subset of DBB(Penk) neurons that project to the lateral hypothalamus are preferentially activated when detecting a high-fat high-sugar (HFHS) diet and transmit a negative valence to inhibit food consumption. Notably, when given free choice of chow and HFHS diets, mice with the whole DBB(Penk) population ablated exhibit reduced consumption of chow but increased intake of the HFHS diet, resulting in accelerated development of obesity and metabolic disturbances. Together, we identify a molecularly defined neural population in male mice that is crucial for the maintenance of energy balance by facilitating homoeostatic feeding while suppressing hedonic overeating.
Distinct basal forebrain-originated neural circuits promote homoeostatic feeding and suppress hedonic feeding in male mice.
源自基底前脑的不同神经回路促进雄性小鼠的稳态摄食并抑制享乐性摄食
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作者:Liu Hailan, Bean Jonathan C, Li Yongxiang, Yu Meng, Ginnard Olivia Z, Conde Kristine M, Wang Mengjie, Fang Xing, Liu Hesong, Tu Longlong, Yin Na, Han Junying, Yang Yongjie, Tong Qingchun, Arenkiel Benjamin R, Wang Chunmei, He Yang, Xu Yong
| 期刊: | Nature Metabolism | 影响因子: | 20.800 |
| 时间: | 2024 | 起止号: | 2024 Sep;6(9):1775-1790 |
| doi: | 10.1038/s42255-024-01099-4 | 研究方向: | 神经科学 |
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