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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 289: R1467-R1476, 2005; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00348.2005
0363-6119/05 $8.00
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APPETITE, OBESITY, DIGESTION, AND METABOLISM

Melanocortin-4 receptor mRNA is expressed in sympathetic nervous system outflow neurons to white adipose tissue

C. Kay Song,1,2 Raven M. Jackson,1 Ruth B. S. Harris,2,3 Denis Richard,4 and Timothy J. Bartness1,2

1Department of Biology, Neurobiology and Behavior Program, 2Center for Behavioral Neuroscience, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia; 3Department of Foods and Nutrition, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia; and 4Department of Anatomy and Physiology, School of Medicine, Laval Hospital Research Center, Laval University, Pavillon Ferdinand-Vandry, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada

Submitted 17 May 2005 ; accepted in final form 25 July 2005

Energy balance results from the coordination of multiple pathways affecting energy expenditure and food intake. Candidate neuropeptides involved in energy balance are the melanocortins. Several species, including Siberian hamsters studied here, decrease and increase food intake in response to stimulation and blockade of the melanocortin 4-receptor (MC4-R). In addition, central application of the MC3/4-R agonist melanotan-II decreases body fat (increases lipolysis) beyond that accounted for by its ability to decrease food intake. Because an increase in the sympathetic nervous system drive to white adipose tissue (WAT) is the principal initiator of lipolysis, we tested whether the sympathetic outflow circuitry from brain to WAT contained MC4-R mRNA expressing cells. This was accomplished by labeling the sympathetic outflow to inguinal WAT using the pseudorabies virus (PRV), a transneuronal retrograde viral tract tracer, and then processing the brain for colocalization of PRV immunoreactivity with MC4-R mRNA, the latter assessed by in situ hybridization. MC4-R mRNA was impressively colocalized in PRV-labeled cells (approximately greater than 60%) in many brain areas across the neuroaxis, including those typically implicated in lipid mobilization (e.g., hypothalamic paraventricular, suprachiasmatic, arcuate and dorsomedial nuclei, lateral hypothalamic area), as well as those not traditionally identified with lipolysis (e.g., preoptic area, subzona incerta of the lateral hypothalamus, periaqueductal gray, solitary nucleus). These data provide compelling neuroanatomical evidence that could underlie a direct central modulation of the sympathetic outflow to WAT by the melanocortins through the MC4-Rs resulting in changes in lipid mobilization and adiposity.

pseudorabies virus; Siberian hamster; obesity; lipolysis



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: Dr. Timothy J. Bartness, Dept. of Biology, Georgia State Univ., 24 Peachtree Center Ave NE, Atlanta, GA 30302–4010 (e-mail: bartness{at}gsu.edu)




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