Näslund Erik, Hellström Per M
Karolinska Institutet, Division of Surgery, Danderyd Hospital, and Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Physiol Behav. 2007 Sep 10;92(1-2):256-62. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2007.05.017. Epub 2007 May 21.
The signaling systems underlying eating behavior control are complex. The current review focuses on gastrointestinal (GI) signaling systems as physiological key functions for metabolic control. Many of the peptides that are involved in the regulation of food intake in the brain are also found in the enteric nervous system and enteroendocrine cells of the mucosa of the GI tract. The only identified hunger-driving signal from the GI tract is ghrelin, which is mainly found in the mucosa of the stomach. Neuropeptides in the brain that influence food intake, of which neuropeptide Y, agouti gene-related peptide and orexins are stimulatory, while melanocortins and alpha-melanocortin stimulating hormone are inhibitory, are influenced by peptide signaling from the gut. These effects may take place directly through action of gut peptide in the brain or through nervous signaling from the periphery to the brain. The criteria for considering a gut hormone or neurotransmitter in a satiety signal seem to be fulfilled for cholecystokinin, glucagon-like peptide-1 and peptide YY(3-36). Other endogenous gut signals do not fulfill these criteria as they do not increase food intake in knock-out animals or in response to receptor antagonism, or display an inconsistent temporal profile with satiety and termination of the meal. Satiety signals from the GI tract act through the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus and the solitary tract nucleus of the brain stem, where neuronal networks directly linked to hypothalamic centers for food intake and eating behavior are activated. We have primarily focused on GI effects of various gut peptides involved in the regulation of food intake, using motor activity as a biomarker for the understanding of gut peptide effects promoting satiety.
控制进食行为的信号系统十分复杂。本综述聚焦于胃肠(GI)信号系统,将其视为代谢控制的生理关键功能。许多参与调节大脑食物摄入的肽类,也存在于胃肠道黏膜的肠神经系统和肠内分泌细胞中。目前已确定的来自胃肠道的饥饿驱动信号只有胃饥饿素,它主要存在于胃黏膜中。大脑中影响食物摄入的神经肽,其中神经肽Y、刺鼠基因相关肽和食欲素具有刺激作用,而黑皮质素和α-促黑皮质素则具有抑制作用,它们会受到来自肠道的肽信号影响。这些作用可能通过肠道肽在大脑中的直接作用,或通过从外周到大脑的神经信号传导来实现。胆囊收缩素、胰高血糖素样肽-1和肽YY(3-36)似乎符合被视为饱腹感信号中肠道激素或神经递质的标准。其他内源性肠道信号则不符合这些标准,因为它们在基因敲除动物中或在受体拮抗反应中不会增加食物摄入量,或者与饱腹感和进食终止的时间模式不一致。来自胃肠道的饱腹感信号通过下丘脑的弓状核和脑干的孤束核起作用,在这些部位,与下丘脑食物摄入和进食行为中心直接相连的神经网络被激活。我们主要关注了参与调节食物摄入的各种肠道肽的胃肠效应,将运动活性作为一种生物标志物,以了解促进饱腹感的肠道肽效应。