Neurobiology of Nutrition Laboratory, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, 70808, USA.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2011 Jun;300(6):R1266-77. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00028.2011. Epub 2011 Mar 16.
Given the unabated obesity problem, there is increasing appreciation of expressions like "my eyes are bigger than my stomach," and recent studies in rodents and humans suggest that dysregulated brain reward pathways may be contributing not only to drug addiction but also to increased intake of palatable foods and ultimately obesity. After describing recent progress in revealing the neural pathways and mechanisms underlying food reward and the attribution of incentive salience by internal state signals, we analyze the potentially circular relationship between palatable food intake, hyperphagia, and obesity. Are there preexisting individual differences in reward functions at an early age, and could they be responsible for development of obesity later in life? Does repeated exposure to palatable foods set off a cascade of sensitization as in drug and alcohol addiction? Are reward functions altered by secondary effects of the obese state, such as increased signaling through inflammatory, oxidative, and mitochondrial stress pathways? Answering these questions will significantly impact prevention and treatment of obesity and its ensuing comorbidities as well as eating disorders and drug and alcohol addiction.
鉴于肥胖问题持续加剧,人们越来越意识到“眼馋肚饱”这样的说法,最近在啮齿动物和人类中的研究表明,大脑奖赏通路失调不仅与药物成瘾有关,还与人们对美味食物摄入的增加,以及最终导致肥胖有关。在描述了揭示食物奖赏和内部状态信号归因于激励显著性的神经通路和机制的最新进展之后,我们分析了美味食物摄入、暴食和肥胖之间可能存在的循环关系。在早期是否存在奖赏功能的个体差异,而这些差异是否可能导致日后肥胖?反复接触美味食物是否会像在药物和酒精成瘾中那样引发一连串的敏感化?肥胖状态的次级效应(如通过炎症、氧化和线粒体应激途径的信号增加)是否会改变奖赏功能?回答这些问题将对肥胖及其并发疾病、饮食障碍以及药物和酒精成瘾的预防和治疗产生重大影响。