Department for Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg 20246, Germany,
Department for Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg 20246, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2019 Jan 30;39(5):888-899. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0250-18.2018. Epub 2018 Dec 17.
Sleep loss is associated with increased obesity risk, as demonstrated by correlations between sleep duration and change in body mass index or body fat percentage. Whereas previous studies linked this weight gain to disturbed endocrine parameters after sleep deprivation or restriction, neuroimaging studies revealed upregulated neural processing of food rewards after sleep loss in reward-processing areas such as the anterior cingulate cortex, ventral striatum, and insula. To address this ongoing debate between hormonal versus hedonic factors underlying sleep-loss-associated weight gain, we rigorously tested the association between sleep deprivation and food cue processing using high-resolution fMRI and assessment of hormones. After taking blood samples from 32 lean, healthy, human male participants, they underwent fMRI while performing a neuroeconomic, value-based decision-making task with snack food and trinket rewards following a full night of habitual sleep and a night of sleep deprivation in a repeated-measures crossover design. We found that des-acyl ghrelin concentrations were increased after sleep deprivation compared with habitual sleep. Despite similar hunger ratings due to fasting in both conditions, participants were willing to spend more money on food items only after sleep deprivation. Furthermore, fMRI data paralleled this behavioral finding, revealing a food-reward-specific upregulation of hypothalamic valuation signals and amygdala-hypothalamic coupling after a single night of sleep deprivation. Behavioral and fMRI results were not significantly correlated with changes in acyl, des-acyl, or total ghrelin concentrations. Our results suggest that increased food valuation after sleep loss might be due to hedonic rather than hormonal mechanisms. Epidemiological studies suggest an association between overweight and reduced nocturnal sleep, but the relative contributions of hedonic and hormonal factors to overeating after sleep loss are a matter of ongoing controversy. Here, we tested the association between sleep deprivation and food cue processing in a repeated-measures crossover design using fMRI. We found that willingness to pay increased for food items only after sleep deprivation. fMRI data paralleled this behavioral finding, revealing a food-reward-specific upregulation of hypothalamic valuation signals and amygdala-hypothalamic coupling after a single night of sleep deprivation. However, there was no evidence for hormonal modulations of behavioral or fMRI findings. Our results suggest that increased food valuation after sleep loss is due to hedonic rather than hormonal mechanisms.
睡眠不足与肥胖风险增加有关,这可以通过睡眠时间与体重指数或体脂肪百分比变化之间的相关性来证明。虽然先前的研究表明,睡眠剥夺或限制会导致内分泌参数紊乱,从而导致体重增加,但神经影像学研究表明,在前扣带皮层、腹侧纹状体和岛叶等奖励处理区域,睡眠不足后,食物奖励的神经处理会增加。为了解决睡眠不足导致体重增加的激素因素与享乐因素之间的持续争论,我们使用高分辨率 fMRI 并评估激素,严格测试了睡眠剥夺与食物线索处理之间的关联。在从 32 名健康的瘦人男性参与者中采集血样后,他们在进行一项神经经济学、基于价值的决策任务时接受了 fMRI 检查,任务中使用了零食和小饰品作为奖励,参与者在习惯性睡眠的一整晚和睡眠剥夺的一整晚后进行了重复测量交叉设计。我们发现,与习惯性睡眠相比,睡眠剥夺后去酰基 ghrelin 浓度增加。尽管在两种情况下由于禁食导致饥饿感评分相似,但只有在睡眠剥夺后,参与者才愿意花更多的钱购买食物。此外,fMRI 数据与这一行为发现相吻合,揭示了单一夜间睡眠剥夺后下丘脑估值信号和杏仁核-下丘脑连接的食物奖励特异性上调。行为和 fMRI 结果与酰基、去酰基或总 ghrelin 浓度的变化没有显著相关性。我们的结果表明,睡眠不足后食物估值的增加可能是由于享乐而非激素机制。流行病学研究表明,超重与夜间睡眠减少有关,但在睡眠不足后暴饮暴食的享乐和激素因素的相对贡献仍存在争议。在这里,我们使用 fMRI 在重复测量交叉设计中测试了睡眠剥夺与食物线索处理之间的关联。我们发现,只有在睡眠剥夺后,参与者才愿意为食物支付更高的价格。fMRI 数据与这一行为发现相吻合,揭示了单一夜间睡眠剥夺后下丘脑估值信号和杏仁核-下丘脑连接的食物奖励特异性上调。然而,没有证据表明激素对行为或 fMRI 发现有调节作用。我们的结果表明,睡眠不足后食物估值的增加是由于享乐而非激素机制。