A neural circuit for excessive feeding driven by environmental context in mice

Despite notable genetic influences, obesity mainly results from the overconsumption of food, which arises from the interplay of physiological, cognitive and environmental factors. In patients with obesity, eating is determined more by external cues than by internal physiological needs. However, how...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature neuroscience 2021-08, Vol.24 (8), p.1132-1141
Hauptverfasser: Mohammad, Hasan, Senol, Esra, Graf, Martin, Lee, Chun-Yao, Li, Qin, Liu, Qing, Yeo, Xin Yi, Wang, Menghan, Laskaratos, Achilleas, Xu, Fuqiang, Luo, Sarah Xinwei, Jung, Sangyong, Augustine, George J., Fu, Yu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite notable genetic influences, obesity mainly results from the overconsumption of food, which arises from the interplay of physiological, cognitive and environmental factors. In patients with obesity, eating is determined more by external cues than by internal physiological needs. However, how environmental context drives non-homeostatic feeding is elusive. Here, we identify a population of somatostatin ( TN SST) neurons in the mouse hypothalamic tuberal nucleus that are preferentially activated by palatable food. Activation of TN SST neurons enabled a context to drive non-homeostatic feeding in sated mice and required inputs from the subiculum. Pairing a context with palatable food greatly potentiated synaptic transmission between the subiculum and TN SST neurons and drove non-homeostatic feeding that could be selectively suppressed by inhibiting TN SST neurons or the subiculum but not other major orexigenic neurons. These results reveal how palatable food, through a specific hypothalamic circuit, empowers environmental context to drive non-homeostatic feeding. Tuberal nucleus SST + neurons respond to palatable food. The activity of these SST neurons together with their plastic inputs from the ventral subiculum play critical roles in contextually conditioned feeding.
ISSN:1097-6256
1546-1726
DOI:10.1038/s41593-021-00875-9