瘦素和胰岛素是肥胖的信号吗?

Forum of Nutrition Pub Date : 2010-01-01 Epub Date: 2009-11-27 DOI:10.1159/000264399
Jacquelien J G Hillebrand, Nori Geary
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引用次数: 27

摘要

肥胖的生理调节应该依赖于内分泌的“肥胖信号”,这些信号会告诉大脑脂肪组织的质量。胰岛素和瘦素的基础水平被广泛认为是肥胖的信号,而胰肽、胃饥饿素和YY肽也被假设为肥胖的信号。对这些观点的支持来自基础激素水平和肥胖水平之间的联系,来自这些激素受体在神经回路中调节能量稳态的证明,来自激素对饮食和能量消耗的作用的神经药理学操作,以及来自这些内分泌信号通路突变对动物或人的能量平衡的影响。本章只关注这四种证据中的第一种,并且只关注胰岛素和瘦素。我们想知道这两种激素的循环水平是否真的编码了作为肥胖信号的必要信息。在考虑这个问题时,我们强调在稳态和动态状态下AT质量调节的区别。我们认为,识别潜在有效的肥胖信号的最佳实验设计涉及肥胖水平随着生物体对施加的扰动的反应而变化的情况。传统上,这种类型的设计最令人信服地支持了肥胖受到积极调节的观点。不幸的是,很少有这样的研究针对任何假设的内分泌肥胖信号,现有的证据并不能有力地支持这些假设。因此,我们得出结论,肥胖是如何向大脑发出信号的问题在能量稳态生理学中仍然是一个开放的前沿。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do leptin and insulin signal adiposity?

The physiological regulation of adiposity is supposed to depend on endocrine 'adiposity signals' that inform the brain about the mass of the adipose tissue. Basal levels of insulin and leptin are widely accepted to be adiposity signals, and amylin, ghrelin and peptide YY have been hypothesized to be. Support for these ideas comes from associations between basal hormone levels and levels of adiposity, from demonstrations of receptors for these hormones in neural circuits supposed to regulate energy homeostasis, from neuropharmacological manipulations of the hormones' actions on eating and energy expenditure, and from the effects on energy balance in animals or people bearing mutations in these endocrine signaling pathways. This chapter focuses on only the first of these four types of evidence and only on insulin and leptin. We ask whether circulating levels of either hormone indeed encodes the necessary information to act as an adiposity signal. In considering this question, we emphasize the distinction between regulation of AT mass in steady versus dynamic states. We argue that the best experimental designs for identifying potentially effective adiposity signals involve situations in which the level of adiposity is changing as the organism responds to imposed perturbations. Traditionally, this is the type of design that most convincingly supports the idea that adiposity is actively regulated. Unfortunately, there are few of such studies for any of the hypothesized endocrine adiposity signals, and the evidence that is available does not strongly support the hypotheses. Therefore, we conclude that the question of how adiposity is signaled to the brain remains an open frontier in the physiology of energy homeostasis.

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