Bray G A, York D A
Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70808, USA.
Recent Prog Horm Res. 1998;53:95-117; discussion 117-8.
The regulation of body fat stores is a problem of energy and nutrient balance that can be most readily viewed as a feedback system. Several elements are involved in any feedback system, including afferent signals, a controller that senses the afferent signals and transduces their information and then activates efferent controls that regulate the controlled system. The recent discovery of leptin has provided a major missing link in the feedback control system. This afferent signal is produced exclusively in fat cells of nonpregnant mammals but can be produced in the placenta as well. This circulating peptide has a very strong relationship to the level of body fat and its absence experimentally and clinically produces massive obesity. In the controller, or brain, several anatomic regions play a central role in regulating fat stores. Damage to the ventromedial nucleus (VMH) or the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) in the hypothalamus produces massive obesity in mammals and birds. Injury to the central nucleus of the amygala will also produce obesity. In contrast, damage to the lateral hypothalamus reduces body fat. The syndrome of leptin deficiency or defects in the leptin receptors produce a massive obesity that is metabolically similar to the VMH or PVN lesion syndromes of obesity, suggesting that leptin may have its metabolic effects through these medial hypothalamic centers. Support for this idea has come from studies showing that damage to the PVN or VMH will block the effects of leptin. A number of neuropeptides and monoamines are involved with modulating of food intake and fat stores. Both serotonin, acting through 5-HT2C receptors, and norepinephrine, acting through beta 2 and/or beta 3 receptors, reduce food intake. A variety of peptides also influence food intake and body fat. Neuropeptide Y, dynorphin, galanin, and melanocyte-stimulating hormone all increase food intake. In contrast, a large number of peptides--including cholecystokinin, corticotrophin-releasing hormone/urocortin, enterostatin, insulin, leptin, alpha-MSH, and TRH--reduce food intake. Chronic administration of neuropeptide Y, acting through Y-5 receptors, can produce chronically increased food intake and obesity. This syndrome is similar to the VMH syndrome and suggests that NPY must be acting as an inhibitor of a feeding system. The melanocortin receptor system may be particularly important because a mouse that does not express MC4 receptors is massively overweight. These central systems modulate food intake and fat stores by the controlled system. Glucocorticoids from the adrenal gland are important in obesity, since adrenalectomy will reverse or prevent the development of all forms of obesity. The sympathetic nervous system is also important because low sympathetic activity is associated with experimental and clinical obesity. The reciprocal relationship between food intake and sympathetic activity has been a robust relationship, suggesting that beta receptors in the periphery or brain may be involved in feeding control. In one model of dietary obesity resulting when animals eat a high-fat diet, the syndrome is blocked by inhibitory adrenal steroid activity. These animals show a lower level of sympathetic activity and a low level of brain serotonin. Finally, they show an enhanced sensitivity to essential fatty acids when these are applied to the tongue or given into the gut. In this chapter, the control of energy stores as fat is viewed as a feedback system. Leptin is perceived as a key afferent signal and glucocorticoids and the sympathetic nervous system through beta receptors as essential elements of this control system.
身体脂肪储备的调节是一个能量和营养平衡的问题,最容易被看作是一个反馈系统。任何反馈系统都涉及几个要素,包括传入信号、一个感知传入信号并转换其信息,然后激活调节受控系统的传出控制的控制器。瘦素的最近发现为反馈控制系统提供了一个主要的缺失环节。这种传入信号仅在非妊娠哺乳动物的脂肪细胞中产生,但也可在胎盘中产生。这种循环肽与身体脂肪水平有很强的关系,实验和临床上缺乏它会导致大量肥胖。在控制器即大脑中,几个解剖区域在调节脂肪储备中起核心作用。下丘脑腹内侧核(VMH)或室旁核(PVN)受损会导致哺乳动物和鸟类大量肥胖。杏仁核中央核受损也会导致肥胖。相反,下丘脑外侧受损会减少身体脂肪。瘦素缺乏综合征或瘦素受体缺陷会导致大量肥胖,其代谢情况与VMH或PVN损伤所致的肥胖综合征相似,这表明瘦素可能通过这些下丘脑内侧中心产生代谢作用。对这一观点的支持来自于表明PVN或VMH受损会阻断瘦素作用的研究。许多神经肽和单胺参与调节食物摄入和脂肪储备。通过5-HT2C受体起作用的血清素和通过β2和/或β3受体起作用的去甲肾上腺素都会减少食物摄入。多种肽也会影响食物摄入和身体脂肪。神经肽Y、强啡肽、甘丙肽和促黑素细胞激素都会增加食物摄入。相反,大量的肽——包括胆囊收缩素、促肾上腺皮质激素释放激素/尿皮质素、肠抑胃素、胰岛素、瘦素、α-促黑素细胞激素和促甲状腺激素释放激素——会减少食物摄入。通过Y-5受体起作用的神经肽Y的长期给药会导致食物摄入量长期增加和肥胖。这种综合征与VMH综合征相似,表明神经肽Y必定作为进食系统的一种抑制剂起作用。黑皮质素受体系统可能特别重要,因为不表达MC4受体的小鼠会大量超重。这些中枢系统通过受控系统调节食物摄入和脂肪储备。肾上腺分泌的糖皮质激素在肥胖中很重要,因为肾上腺切除术会逆转或预防所有形式肥胖的发展。交感神经系统也很重要,因为低交感神经活动与实验性和临床肥胖有关。食物摄入和交感神经活动之间的相互关系一直很稳固,这表明外周或大脑中的β受体可能参与进食控制。在动物食用高脂肪饮食导致的饮食性肥胖的一个模型中,该综合征被肾上腺类固醇抑制活性所阻断。这些动物的交感神经活动水平较低,大脑血清素水平也较低。最后,当将必需脂肪酸应用于舌头或注入肠道时,它们对必需脂肪酸的敏感性增强。在本章中,将作为脂肪的能量储备的控制视为一个反馈系统。瘦素被视为关键的传入信号,糖皮质激素和通过β受体的交感神经系统被视为该控制系统的基本要素。