Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Endocrine Unit MGH, Division of Bone and Mineral Metabolism, Department of Oral Medicine, Infection and Immunity, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Endocrine Unit MGH, Division of Bone and Mineral Metabolism, Department of Oral Medicine, Infection and Immunity, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Bone. 2018 Oct;115:31-42. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2018.05.018. Epub 2018 May 16.
The brain, which governs most, if not all, physiological functions in the body, from the complexities of cognition, learning and memory, to the regulation of basal body temperature, heart rate and breathing, has long been known to affect skeletal health. In particular, the hypothalamus - located at the base of the brain in close proximity to the medial eminence, where the blood-brain-barrier is not as tight as in other regions of the brain but rather "leaky", due to fenestrated capillaries - is exposed to a variety of circulating body cues, such as nutrients (glucose, fatty acids, amino acids), and hormones (insulin, glucagon, leptin, adiponectin) [1-3].Information collected from the body via these peripheral cues is integrated by hypothalamic sensing neurons and glial cells [4-7], which express receptors for these nutrients and hormones, transforming these cues into physiological outputs. Interestingly, many of the same molecules, including leptin, adiponectin and insulin, regulate both energy and skeletal homeostasis. Moreover, they act on a common set of hypothalamic nuclei and their residing neurons, activating endocrine and neuronal systems, which ultimately fine-tune the body to new physiological states. This review will focus exclusively on the brain-to-bone pathway, highlighting the most important anatomical sites within the brain, which are known to affect bone, but not covering the input pathways and molecules informing the brain of the energy and bone metabolic status, covered elsewhere [8-10]. The discussion in each section will present side by side the metabolic and bone-related functions of hypothalamic nuclei, in an attempt to answer some of the long-standing questions of whether energy is affected by bone remodeling and homeostasis and vice versa.
大脑控制着身体的大多数生理功能,如果不是全部的话,从认知、学习和记忆的复杂性,到基础体温、心率和呼吸的调节,都与骨骼健康有关。长期以来,人们一直认为大脑会影响骨骼健康。特别是下丘脑——位于大脑底部,紧邻正中隆起,血脑屏障不如大脑其他区域紧密,而是由于有窗孔的毛细血管而“渗漏”——暴露于各种循环的身体信号,如营养物质(葡萄糖、脂肪酸、氨基酸)和激素(胰岛素、胰高血糖素、瘦素、脂联素)[1-3]。通过这些外周信号,大脑通过下丘脑感觉神经元和神经胶质细胞[4-7]收集来自身体的信息,这些细胞表达这些营养物质和激素的受体,将这些信号转化为生理输出。有趣的是,许多相同的分子,包括瘦素、脂联素和胰岛素,既能调节能量代谢又能调节骨骼稳态。此外,它们作用于一组共同的下丘脑核及其驻留神经元,激活内分泌和神经元系统,最终使身体适应新的生理状态。这篇综述将专门关注大脑到骨骼的途径,强调大脑中已知影响骨骼的最重要的解剖部位,但不包括向大脑提供能量和骨骼代谢状态信息的输入途径和分子,这些内容在其他地方有介绍[8-10]。在每个部分的讨论中,我们将并列呈现下丘脑核的代谢和骨骼相关功能,试图回答一些长期存在的问题,即能量是否受骨骼重塑和稳态的影响,反之亦然。