Cummings David E, Overduin Joost
Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, Washington 98108, USA.
J Clin Invest. 2007 Jan;117(1):13-23. doi: 10.1172/JCI30227.
Despite substantial fluctuations in daily food intake, animals maintain a remarkably stable body weight, because overall caloric ingestion and expenditure are exquisitely matched over long periods of time, through the process of energy homeostasis. The brain receives hormonal, neural, and metabolic signals pertaining to body-energy status and, in response to these inputs, coordinates adaptive alterations of energy intake and expenditure. To regulate food consumption, the brain must modulate appetite, and the core of appetite regulation lies in the gut-brain axis. This Review summarizes current knowledge regarding the neuroendocrine regulation of food intake by the gastrointestinal system, focusing on gastric distention, intestinal and pancreatic satiation peptides, and the orexigenic gastric hormone ghrelin. We highlight mechanisms governing nutrient sensing and peptide secretion by enteroendocrine cells, including novel taste-like pathways. The increasingly nuanced understanding of the mechanisms mediating gut-peptide regulation and action provides promising targets for new strategies to combat obesity and diabetes.
尽管动物的每日食物摄入量存在大幅波动,但它们的体重却能保持相当稳定,这是因为通过能量平衡过程,长期来看总体热量摄入与消耗精确匹配。大脑接收与身体能量状态相关的激素、神经和代谢信号,并响应这些输入,协调能量摄入和消耗的适应性变化。为了调节食物摄入,大脑必须调节食欲,而食欲调节的核心在于肠脑轴。本综述总结了目前关于胃肠系统对食物摄入进行神经内分泌调节的知识,重点关注胃扩张、肠道和胰腺饱腹感肽以及促食欲的胃激素胃饥饿素。我们强调了肠内分泌细胞控制营养感知和肽分泌的机制,包括新的味觉样途径。对介导肠道肽调节和作用机制的理解日益细化,为对抗肥胖和糖尿病的新策略提供了有前景的靶点。