The short-chain fatty acid acetate reduces appetite via a central homeostatic mechanism


Autoria(s): Frost, G.S.; Sahuri-Arisoylu Meliz,; Lizarbe Blanca,; Cerdan Sebastian,; Brody Leigh,; Anastasovska, J.; Ghourab Samar,; Hankir, M.; Zhang Shuai,; Carling David Swann Jonathan, R.; Gibson, G.R.; Viardot, A.; Morrison Douglas Thomas E Louise,; Bell, J.D.; Sleeth Michelle, L.; Swann Jonathan,; Thomas, E.L.
Data(s)

01/04/2014

Resumo

Increased intake of dietary carbohydrate that is fermented in the colon by the microbiota has been reported to decrease body weight, although the mechanism remains unclear. Here we use in vivo11C-acetate and PET-CT scanning to show that colonic acetate crosses the blood–brain barrier and is taken up by the brain. Intraperitoneal acetate results in appetite suppression and hypothalamic neuronal activation patterning. We also show that acetate administration is associated with activation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and changes in the expression profiles of regulatory neuropeptides that favour appetite suppression. Furthermore, we demonstrate through 13C high-resolution magic-angle-spinning that 13C acetate from fermentation of 13C-labelled carbohydrate in the colon increases hypothalamic 13C acetate above baseline levels. Hypothalamic 13C acetate regionally increases the 13C labelling of the glutamate–glutamine and GABA neuroglial cycles, with hypothalamic 13C lactate reaching higher levels than the ‘remaining brain’. These observations suggest that acetate has a direct role in central appetite regulation.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://westminsterresearch.wmin.ac.uk/14081/1/Thomas_etal_NatureComms_2014.pdf

Frost, G.S., Sahuri-Arisoylu Meliz, , Lizarbe Blanca, , Cerdan Sebastian, , Brody Leigh, , Anastasovska, J., Ghourab Samar, , Hankir, M., Zhang Shuai, , Carling David Swann Jonathan, R., Gibson, G.R., Viardot, A., Morrison Douglas Thomas E Louise, , Bell, J.D., Sleeth Michelle, L., Swann Jonathan, and Thomas, E.L. (2014) The short-chain fatty acid acetate reduces appetite via a central homeostatic mechanism. Nature Communications, 5. ISSN 2041-1723

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Relação

http://westminsterresearch.wmin.ac.uk/14081/

https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4611

10.1038/ncomms4611

Palavras-Chave #Science and Technology
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed