6533b82afe1ef96bd128ba53

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Synergistic interaction between CCK and leptin to regulate food intake.

Lixin WangVicente MartínezJen Yu WeiMaria Dolores BarachinaYvette Taché

subject

Leptinmedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyClinical BiochemistryNeuropeptideBiochemistryCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundEatingMiceEndocrinologyInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansReceptorCholecystokininGastric emptyingLeptindigestive oral and skin physiologyArea postremaBody WeightDrug SynergismRatsEndocrinologynervous systemchemistryHypothalamusCapsaicinCholecystokininhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonists

description

Abstract Leptin administered (either intracerebroventricularly, icv, or intraperitoneally, ip) acts in synergy with CCK to suppress food intake and body weight in lean mice or rats. The potentiating effect induced by the co-injection of ip CCK and leptin to inhibit food consumption in mice is mediated by the CCK-A receptor and capsaicin sensitive afferents. In vitro, studies in rats showed that a subset of gastric vagal afferent fibers responded to leptin injected directly into the gastric artery only after a prior intra-arterial CCK injection. Moreover, the tonic activity of gastric-related neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) increased when leptin was delivered into the gastric chamber of an in vitro stomach–brainstem preparation. CCK co-injected with leptin potentiated Fos expression selectively in the area postrema, NTS and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN), which points to the PVN as part of the afferent and efferent limbs of the circuitry involved in the synergistic interaction between leptin and CCK. The dampening of CCK or leptin inhibitory action on ingestive behavior when either factor is not present or their receptors are non functional supports the notion that such leptin-CCK interaction may have a physiological relevance. These observations provide a mean through which leptin and CCK integrate short- and mid-term meal-related input signals into long-term control of energy balance.

10.1016/s0167-0115(00)00153-1https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11024569