Rohner-Jeanrenaud E, Jeanrenaud B
Laboratoires de Recherches Métaboliques, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland.
Ann Endocrinol (Paris). 1997;58(2):137-42.
The discovery of both neuropeptide Y and of leptin has led to a better understanding of the pathophysiology of obesity syndromes in animal models. It has strengthened the concept of the importance of the hypothalamus in the etiology of these syndromes. Due to alterations in the regulation of the hypothalamus, e.g. by insulin, by leptin or by decreases in the availability of glucose in specific brain areas, most animal models of obesity have higher than normal hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels. As neuropeptide Y is a potent orexigenic agent, this hypothalamic defect explains why obese rodents are hyperphagic. Increased hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels produce hyperinsulinemia and hypercorticism, two abnormalities previously reported in obesity, but whose origin is now known to be driven by neuropeptide Y. As hyperinsulinemia favors lipid accretion and muscle insulin resistance, and as hypercorticism favors the occurrence of both high circulating triglyceride levels and muscle insulin resistance, it may be appreciated that most disorders previously reported in obesity can now be explained by high hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels. Leptin, produced and secreted by adipose tissue, is a potent anorectic agent whose main action is exerted within the hypothalamus in which it has been shown to decrease neuropeptide Y, therefore food intake. Leptin secretion is favored, in particular, by insulin as well as by glucocorticoids. When leptin is administered to obese mice of the ob/ob strain (which do not produce nor secrete leptin due to a gene mutation), their food intake, body weight and most metabolic abnormalities are normalized. However, in the majority of genetically obese rodents, as well as in obese humans, circulating levels of leptin are high. This is related to hyperinsulinemia- and hypercorticosteronemia-induced leptin oversecretion, as well as to central leptin receptor dysfunctions preventing normal leptin access to and action within specific brain areas. Under these conditions and to prevent the effects of elevated hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels, neuropeptide Y antagonists or active leptin agonists must be found. Neuropeptide Y and leptin further underline the existence of functional relationship between the brain (hypothalamus) and the periphery (adipose tissue, muscle). Lack of leptin (mutated leptin gene) or inefficient leptin action (leptin receptor defect) results in increased hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels. The latter favor hyperinsulinemia and hypercorticism both producing oversecretion of leptin which, when inefficient, cannot decrease neuropeptide Y: a vicious circle is created which maintains either a "thrifty phenotype" favoring fat depot or overt obesity, depending on the degree of hyperphagia.
神经肽Y和瘦素的发现使人们对动物模型中肥胖综合征的病理生理学有了更好的理解。这强化了下丘脑在这些综合征病因中重要性的概念。由于下丘脑调节的改变,例如受胰岛素、瘦素影响,或特定脑区葡萄糖供应减少,大多数肥胖动物模型的下丘脑神经肽Y水平高于正常。由于神经肽Y是一种有效的促食欲剂,这种下丘脑缺陷解释了肥胖啮齿动物为何食欲亢进。下丘脑神经肽Y水平升高会导致高胰岛素血症和高皮质醇血症,这是肥胖中先前报道的两种异常情况,但其根源现在已知是由神经肽Y驱动的。由于高胰岛素血症有利于脂质堆积和肌肉胰岛素抵抗,且高皮质醇血症有利于循环甘油三酯水平升高和肌肉胰岛素抵抗的发生,可以认识到肥胖中先前报道的大多数病症现在都可以用下丘脑神经肽Y水平升高来解释。瘦素由脂肪组织产生和分泌,是一种有效的食欲抑制剂,其主要作用在下丘脑发挥,已证明它能降低神经肽Y,从而减少食物摄入。瘦素分泌尤其受胰岛素和糖皮质激素的促进。当给ob/ob品系的肥胖小鼠(由于基因突变不产生也不分泌瘦素)注射瘦素时,它们的食物摄入量、体重和大多数代谢异常都会恢复正常。然而,在大多数遗传性肥胖啮齿动物以及肥胖人类中,循环中的瘦素水平很高。这与高胰岛素血症和高皮质醇血症诱导的瘦素分泌过多有关,也与中枢瘦素受体功能障碍有关,这种功能障碍阻止瘦素正常进入特定脑区并在其中发挥作用。在这些情况下,为了防止下丘脑神经肽Y水平升高的影响,必须找到神经肽Y拮抗剂或活性瘦素激动剂。神经肽Y和瘦素进一步强调了大脑(下丘脑)与外周(脂肪组织、肌肉)之间功能关系的存在。缺乏瘦素(瘦素基因突变)或瘦素作用效率低下(瘦素受体缺陷)会导致下丘脑神经肽Y水平升高。后者有利于高胰岛素血症和高皮质醇血症,两者都会导致瘦素分泌过多,而当瘦素作用效率低下时,它无法降低神经肽Y:由此形成一个恶性循环,根据食欲亢进的程度,维持有利于脂肪储存的“节俭表型”或明显肥胖。