动机失调与黑素皮质素4受体单倍不足。

NeuroImmune pharmacology and therapeutics Pub Date : 2024-11-20 eCollection Date: 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1515/nipt-2024-0011
Alex M Steiner, Robert F Roscoe, Rosemarie M Booze, Charles F Mactutus
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摘要

无论以何种标准衡量,肥胖都是一场全球性的健康危机。基因和饮食对肥胖的发展和维持都是我们实验设计的重要因素。由于黑素皮质素4受体(MC4R)突变是肥胖的主要单基因原因,在纵向设计中,MC4R单倍不足的大鼠被喂食一系列膳食脂肪(0-12 %)。生理和动机评估采用运动任务、五选项蔗糖偏好任务、固定和递进比例操作任务以及分心操作任务进行。同时对D1和D2受体丰富的伏隔核(NAc)中棘神经元(MSNs)的树突棘形态进行了观察。使用面积分数分配器探针进行立体测量,还分析了每只大鼠肝脏中脂质沉积的百分比。MC4R单倍不全导致成人发病肥胖的表型相似,而高脂肪饮食的消耗加剧了这种相似。操作性任务的结果表明,由于MC4R单倍体不足导致的动机缺陷在肥胖发生之前是明显的,并且在肥胖确定后因饮食脂肪消耗而加剧。此外,在高脂肪饮食下,MC4R+/-动物的MSN形态转变为更长的脊柱和更小的头部直径,这表明为食物而工作的动机失调的潜在机制。增加我们对负责食物奖励特性的神经回路/机制的知识,对理解能量平衡和肥胖的发展具有重要意义。
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Motivational dysregulation with melanocortin 4 receptor haploinsufficiency.

Obesity, by any standard, is a global health crisis. Both genetic and dietary contributions to the development and maintenance of obesity were integral factors of our experimental design. As mutations of the melanocortin 4 receptors (MC4R) are the leading monogenetic cause of obesity, MC4R haploinsufficient rats were fed a range of dietary fat (0-12 %) in a longitudinal design. Physiological and motivational assessments were performed using a locomotor task, a 5-choice sucrose preference task, an operant task with fixed and progressive ratios, as well as a distraction operant task. Dendritic spine morphology of medium spiny neurons (MSNs) of the nucleus accumbens (NAc), cells with ample D1 and D2 receptors, was also assessed. The percentage of lipid deposits in the liver of each rat was also analyzed using the Area Fraction Fractionator probe for stereological measurements. MC4R haploinsufficiency resulted in a phenotypic resemblance for adult-onset obesity that was exacerbated by the consumption of a high-fat diet. Results from the operant tasks indicate that motivational deficits due to MC4R haploinsufficiency were apparent prior to the onset of obesity and exacerbated by dietary fat consumption after obesity was well established. Moreover, MSN morphology shifted to longer spines with smaller head diameters for the MC4R+/- animals under the high-fat diet, suggesting a potential mechanism for the dysregulation of motivation to work for food. Increasing our knowledge of the neural circuitry/mechanisms responsible for the rewarding properties of food has significant implications for understanding energy balance and the development of obesity.

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