Obesity affects a
staggering 40 percent of adults and 20 percent of children in the United
States. While some new popular therapies are helping to tackle the epidemic of
obesity, there is still so much that researchers do not understand about the
brain-body connection that regulates appetite. Now, researchers have discovered
a previously unknown population of neurons in the hypothalamus that regulate
food intake and could be a promising new target for obesity drugs.
In a study published in the Dec. 5 issue
of Nature, a team of researchers from the Laboratory of
Molecular Genetics at Rockefeller University in New York, the Institute for Genome
Science (IGS) at the University of Maryland
School of Medicine (UMSOM) in
Baltimore, as well as New York and Stanford Universities discovered a new
population of neurons that is responsive to the hormone leptin. Leptin
responsive neurons are important in obesity since leptin is sent to the brain
from the body’s fat stores to suppress hunger.
“We’ve long known that the
hypothalamus—located deep in the brain—plays a role in hunger, hormone levels,
stress responses, and body temperature,” said Brian
Herb, PhD, a scientist
at IGS and a Research Associate of Pharmacology, Physiology, and Drug
Development at UMSOM. His research published in 2023 in Science
Advances was the
first time that scientists used single-cell technology to map the cells in the
developing hypothalamus in humans, from precursor stem cells to mature neurons.
“Since our earlier research showed that
unique regulatory programs in genes give rise to specialized neuronal
populations—it makes sense that this new research discovered a previously
unknown set of neurons that regulate energy and food intake,” Dr. Herb added
Through several experiments with mice,
the researchers found that this previously unknown neuronal population that
express both receptors for leptin and the BNC2 gene
not only helps suppress hunger, but also responds to food-related sensory cues,
such as food palatability and nutritional status. For example, the researchers
used CRISPR-Cas 9 to knock out the leptin receptor (LEPR) in these BNC2
neurons. Those mice ate more and gained more weight than control mice. In
addition, researchers added fluorescence to the BNC2 neurons and noticed when
they fed mice after fasting, the BCN2 neurons activated, whereas previously
known neuronal populations in the hypothalamus did not react.
“BNC2 neurons in the hypothalamus, which
are activated by the hunger hormone leptin, provide the potential for a
completely new class of obesity drugs,” said Mark
T. Gladwin, MD, who is the John Z.
and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and Dean of UMSOM, and Vice
President for Medical Affairs at University of Maryland, Baltimore. “These
drugs would be distinct from Ozempic and other GLP-1 agonists, which
stimulate insulin secretion. Leptin-targeting drugs could be beneficial for
those who can’t tolerate GLP-agonists due to gastrointestinal side effects like
nausea and stomach upset.”
Source: Researchers Discover New Neurons that Suppress Food Intake – Scents of Science
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