Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-1650, USA.
Nat Commun. 2013;4:2259. doi: 10.1038/ncomms3259.
Epidemiological evidence supports a link between sleep loss and obesity. However, the detrimental impact of sleep deprivation on central brain mechanisms governing appetitive food desire remains unknown. Here we report that sleep deprivation significantly decreases activity in appetitive evaluation regions within the human frontal cortex and insular cortex during food desirability choices, combined with a converse amplification of activity within the amygdala. Moreover, this bi-directional change in the profile of brain activity is further associated with a significant increase in the desire for weight-gain promoting high-calorie foods following sleep deprivation, the extent of which is predicted by the subjective severity of sleep loss across participants. These findings provide an explanatory brain mechanism by which insufficient sleep may lead to the development/maintenance of obesity through diminished activity in higher-order cortical evaluation regions, combined with excess subcortical limbic responsivity, resulting in the selection of foods most capable of triggering weight-gain.
流行病学证据支持睡眠不足与肥胖之间存在关联。然而,睡眠剥夺对控制食欲的中枢大脑机制的有害影响尚不清楚。在这里,我们报告说,在进行食物渴望选择时,睡眠剥夺会显著降低人类额叶和脑岛皮层中与食欲评估相关的区域的活动,同时杏仁核的活动则相反地增强。此外,这种大脑活动特征的双向变化与睡眠剥夺后对促进体重增加的高热量食物的欲望显著增加有关,而这种增加的程度可以根据参与者主观感受到的睡眠不足的严重程度来预测。这些发现提供了一个解释性的大脑机制,即通过降低高级皮质评估区域的活动,同时增加皮质下边缘系统的反应性,导致选择最有可能引发体重增加的食物,从而导致睡眠不足可能导致肥胖的发展/维持。