Vol. 283, Issue 2, R356-R357, August 2002
EDITORIAL FOCUS
Integrating the regulation of food intake
W. A.
Cupples
SMBD-Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec,
Canada H3T 1E2
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ARTICLE |
CONTROL OF FOOD INTAKE is complex,
involving multiple interconnected pathways and signal elements. A paper
by Wang and Kotz (11) in this issue of the American
Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative
Physiology illustrates some of the complexity and carries
implications for how the regulation of food intake is integrated into
the daily life of humans and other animals. Wang and Kotz studied the
inhibition, by urocortin injected into the lateral septum, of feeding
that had been stimulated either by food deprivation or by injection of
orexin A into the lateral hypothalamus.
Orexin-A and orexin-B are recent additions to the list of signal
peptides that contribute to regulation of food intake. First reported
four years ago (6, 10), they were so named because they
are synthesized only in a small group of neurons in the lateral hypothalamus, a region of the brain long known to be an important contributor to feeding behavior. The initial and subsequent studies showed that these peptides are in fact orexigenic
when injected into
the lateral ventricle or the lateral hypothalamus they promote eating.
However, it is by no means clear that this is their primary function.
In dogs, narcolepsy is inherited in Mendelian fashion as an autosomal
dominant trait with complete penetrance. Inactivating mutations of the
orexin type 2 receptor causes narcolepsy in dogs (5).
Similarly, orexin knockout mice display a narcoleptic phenotype
(4), whereas humans with the disease have abnormally low
orexin levels in cerebrospinal fluid (13). On the basis of
these findings and on the fact that orexin neurons project widely
throughout the central nervous system, it has been proposed that the
main function of orexin is to lock the organism in the awake state
(8). In addition, orexins augment sympathetic vasomotor output, increasing heart rate and blood pressure (1, 2, 7,
9).
Such diversity of reported functions is suggestive of an integrative
behavioral program that would activate, or at least prime, several
components of wakefulness. A program such as this would be expected to
involve many brain structures. One such structure is the lateral
septum, which is part of the limbic system and receives a large input
from the hippocampus. The septum and hippocampus perform high-order
integration related to "formation of new, complex cognitive
associations" (3). The lateral septum receives input from, and projects monosynaptically to, the lateral hypothalamus. It
might thus be expected to provide contextual information to the
hypothalamus. Stimulation or lesions of the lateral septum produce
reciprocal, although somewhat complex, changes in feeding behavior;
stimulation reduces food intake. However, the signaling pathways remain
unclear. One candidate is urocortin, a peptide that appears to be the
endogenous ligand for the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) type 2 receptor (CRH2R) and is present at high levels in the lateral septum
(10).
The paper by Wang and Kotz (11) in this issue addresses
this problem. This group previously showed that injection of urocortin into the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus inhibits food intake induced by food deprivation or by neuropeptide Y (12).
However, the authors suggested that other sites are probably involved
in urocortin-mediated inhibition of food intake. In the present study (11), the authors show that injection of urocortin into
the lateral septal area inhibits feeding induced by both food
deprivation and injection of orexin A into the lateral hypothalamus.
Importantly, this inhibition is blocked by a CRH2R antagonist in the
lateral septum, and, as expected (10), urocortin is a more
potent agonist than CRH. Equally important, the effect of urocortin is
not due to production of a conditioned taste aversion. This makes it
more likely that the pathway being examined is truly part of a
regulatory circuit.
Obviously it is essential to eat to survive and the organism must be
awake to eat. Yet being awake is not synonymous with eating as there
are other things the animal must also do. It must make choices about
what behaviors are or are not appropriate in a given environment.
Presumably, it is this sort of contextual information that is
transmitted from the lateral septum to the lateral hypothalamus and
other control centers.
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FOOTNOTES |
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence:
W. A. Cupples, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital, 3755 Cote
Ste. Catherine Rd., Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1E2 (E-mail:
will.cupples{at}mcgill.on).
10.1152/ajpregu.00269.2002
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