Luo Shan, Melrose A James, Dorton Hilary, Alves Jasmin, Monterosso John R, Page Kathleen A
Division of Endocrinology, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, 90089, United States; Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, 90089, United States; Diabetes and Obesity Research Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, 90089, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, 90089, United States; Diabetes and Obesity Research Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, 90089, United States.
Appetite. 2017 Sep 1;116:464-470. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.05.038. Epub 2017 May 25.
Feeding behavior is regulated by a complex interaction of central nervous system responses to metabolic signals that reflect nutrient availability and to food cues that trigger appetitive responses. Prior work has shown that the hypothalamus is a key brain area that senses and responds to changes in metabolic signals, and exposure to food cues induces the activation of brain areas involved in reward processing. However, it is not known how the hypothalamic responses to changes in metabolic state are related to reward responses to food cues. This study aimed to understand whether changes in hypothalamic activity in response to glucose-induced metabolic signals are linked to food-cue reactivity within brain areas involved in reward processing. We combined two neuroimaging modalities (Arterial Spin Labeling and Blood Oxygen Level Dependent) to measure glucose-induced changes in hypothalamic cerebral blood flow (CBF) and food-cue task induced changes in brain activity within reward-related regions. Twenty-five participants underwent a MRI session following glucose ingestion and a subset of twenty individuals underwent an additional water session on a separate day as a control condition (drink order randomized). Hunger was assessed before and after drink consumption. We observed that individuals who had a greater reduction in hypothalamic CBF exhibited a greater reduction in left ventral striatum food cue reactivity (Spearman's rho = 0.46, P = 0.048) following glucose vs. water ingestion. These results are the first to use multimodal imaging to demonstrate a link between hypothalamic metabolic signaling and ventral striatal food cue reactivity.
进食行为受到中枢神经系统对反映营养可利用性的代谢信号以及触发食欲反应的食物线索的复杂相互作用的调节。先前的研究表明,下丘脑是感知并响应代谢信号变化的关键脑区,接触食物线索会诱导参与奖赏处理的脑区激活。然而,尚不清楚下丘脑对代谢状态变化的反应与对食物线索的奖赏反应之间有何关联。本研究旨在了解下丘脑对葡萄糖诱导的代谢信号的活动变化是否与参与奖赏处理的脑区内的食物线索反应性相关。我们结合了两种神经成像方式(动脉自旋标记和血氧水平依赖)来测量葡萄糖诱导的下丘脑脑血流量(CBF)变化以及食物线索任务诱导的奖赏相关区域内的脑活动变化。25名参与者在摄入葡萄糖后接受了一次MRI检查,20名参与者的一个子集在另一天额外接受了一次饮水检查作为对照条件(饮水顺序随机)。在饮水前后评估饥饿程度。我们观察到,与摄入水相比,摄入葡萄糖后下丘脑CBF下降幅度更大的个体,其左腹侧纹状体食物线索反应性下降幅度也更大(斯皮尔曼相关系数ρ = 0.46,P = 0.048)。这些结果首次使用多模态成像来证明下丘脑代谢信号与腹侧纹状体食物线索反应性之间的联系。