Institute of Veterinary Physiology and Center for Integrated Human Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; and.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2013 Dec;305(11):R1215-67. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00446.2012. Epub 2013 Jul 31.
Hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis function fundamentally affects the physiology of eating. We review sex differences in the physiological and pathophysiological controls of amounts eaten in rats, mice, monkeys, and humans. These controls result from interactions among genetic effects, organizational effects of reproductive hormones (i.e., permanent early developmental effects), and activational effects of these hormones (i.e., effects dependent on hormone levels). Male-female sex differences in the physiology of eating involve both organizational and activational effects of androgens and estrogens. An activational effect of estrogens decreases eating 1) during the periovulatory period of the ovarian cycle in rats, mice, monkeys, and women and 2) tonically between puberty and reproductive senescence or ovariectomy in rats and monkeys, sometimes in mice, and possibly in women. Estrogens acting on estrogen receptor-α (ERα) in the caudal medial nucleus of the solitary tract appear to mediate these effects in rats. Androgens, prolactin, and other reproductive hormones also affect eating in rats. Sex differences in eating are mediated by alterations in orosensory capacity and hedonics, gastric mechanoreception, ghrelin, CCK, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), glucagon, insulin, amylin, apolipoprotein A-IV, fatty-acid oxidation, and leptin. The control of eating by central neurochemical signaling via serotonin, MSH, neuropeptide Y, Agouti-related peptide (AgRP), melanin-concentrating hormone, and dopamine is modulated by HPG function. Finally, sex differences in the physiology of eating may contribute to human obesity, anorexia nervosa, and binge eating. The variety and physiological importance of what has been learned so far warrant intensifying basic, translational, and clinical research on sex differences in eating.
下丘脑-垂体-性腺 (HPG) 轴功能对摄食的生理学基础有重要影响。我们综述了大鼠、小鼠、猴子和人类中摄食量的生理和病理生理控制的性别差异。这些控制源于遗传效应、生殖激素的组织效应(即早期发育的永久性影响)以及这些激素的激活效应(即依赖于激素水平的效应)之间的相互作用。摄食的生理性别差异涉及雄激素和雌激素的组织和激活作用。雌激素的激活作用会降低 1)大鼠、小鼠、猴子和女性卵巢周期排卵前期间的摄食量,2)大鼠和猴子青春期到生殖衰老或卵巢切除之间的摄食量,有时在小鼠中,可能在女性中也有这种情况。在大鼠中,作用于孤束核尾侧-medial 核中的雌激素受体-α (ERα) 的雌激素似乎介导了这些作用。雄激素、催乳素和其他生殖激素也会影响大鼠的摄食。摄食的性别差异是通过口味觉容量和快感、胃机械感受、胃饥饿素、胆囊收缩素、胰高血糖素样肽-1 (GLP-1)、胰高血糖素、胰岛素、胰淀素、载脂蛋白 A-IV、脂肪酸氧化和瘦素的改变来介导的。通过 5-羟色胺、MSH、神经肽 Y、Agouti 相关肽 (AgRP)、黑色素浓缩激素和多巴胺等中枢神经化学信号对摄食的控制受 HPG 功能的调节。最后,摄食的生理学性别差异可能导致人类肥胖、神经性厌食症和暴食症。迄今为止所学到的多样性和生理学重要性证明,有必要加强对摄食性别差异的基础、转化和临床研究。