Brain glucose sensing and body energy homeostasis: role in obesity and diabetes
- 1 May 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
- Vol. 276 (5) , R1223-R1231
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.1999.276.5.r1223
Abstract
The brain has evolved mechanisms for sensing and regulating glucose metabolism. It receives neural inputs from glucosensors in the periphery but also contains neurons that directly sense changes in glucose levels by using glucose as a signal to alter their firing rate. Glucose-responsive (GR) neurons increase and glucose-sensitive (GS) decrease their firing rate when brain glucose levels rise. GR neurons use an ATP-sensitive K+channel to regulate their firing. The mechanism regulating GS firing is less certain. Both GR and GS neurons respond to, and participate in, the changes in food intake, sympathoadrenal activity, and energy expenditure produced by extremes of hyper- and hypoglycemia. It is less certain that they respond to the small swings in plasma glucose required for the more physiological regulation of energy homeostasis. Both obesity and diabetes are associated with several alterations in brain glucose sensing. In rats with diet-induced obesity and hyperinsulinemia, GR neurons are hyporesponsive to glucose. Insulin-dependent diabetic rats also have abnormalities of GR neurons and neurotransmitter systems potentially involved in glucose sensing. Thus the challenge for the future is to define the role of brain glucose sensing in the physiological regulation of energy balance and in the pathophysiology of obesity and diabetes.Keywords
This publication has 91 references indexed in Scilit:
- α Endosulfine Is a Novel Molecule, Structually Related to a Family of PhosphoproteinsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1996
- Cloning and functional expression of the cDNA encoding a novel ATP‐sensitive potassium channel subunit expressed in pancreatic β‐cells, brain, heart and skeletal muscleFEBS Letters, 1995
- Ventromedial hypothalamic lesions in rats suppress counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- Neuropeptide Y in the arcuate nucleus is modulated by alterations in glucose utilizationBrain Research, 1993
- Unexpected regulation of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y by food deprovation and refeeding in the Zucker rat.Life Sciences, 1992
- Expression of human brain hexokinase in Escherichiacoli: Purification and characterization of the expressed enzymeBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Activation by cromakalim of pre- and post-synaptic ATP-sensitive K+ channels in substantia nigraBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Glucose, insulin and sympathoadrenal activationJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1987
- Sustained Intracerebroventricular Infusion of Brain Fuels Reduces Body Weight and Food Intake in RatsScience, 1981
- The effect of glucose on the activity of the adrenal nerve and pancreatic branch of the vagus nerve in the rabbitNeuroscience Letters, 1975