Literature DB >> 17270337

Causes of obesity: looking beyond the hypothalamus.

A Peters1, L Pellerin, M F Dallman, K M Oltmanns, U Schweiger, J Born, H L Fehm.   

Abstract

The brain takes a primary position in the organism. We present the novel view that the brain gives priority to controlling its own adenosine triphosphate (ATP) concentration. It fulfils this tenet by orchestrating metabolism in the organism. The brain activates an energy-on-request system that directly couples cerebral supply with cerebral need. The request system is hierarchically organized among the cerebral hemispheres, the hypothalamus, and peripheral somatomotor, autonomic-visceromotor, and the neuroendocrine-secretomotor neurons. The system initiates allocative behavior (i.e. allocation of energy from body to brain), ingestive behavior (intake of energy from the immediate environment), or exploratory behavior (foraging in the distant environment). Cerebral projections coordinate all three behavioral strategies in such a way that the brain's energy supply is guaranteed continuously. In an ongoing learning process, the brain's request system adapts to various environmental conditions and stressful challenges. Disruption of a cerebral energy-request pathway is critical to the development of obesity: if the brain fails to receive sufficient energy from the peripheral body, it compensates for the undersupply by increasing energy intake from the immediate environment, leaving the body with a surplus. Obesity develops in the long term.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17270337     DOI: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2006.12.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Neurobiol        ISSN: 0301-0082            Impact factor:   11.685


  27 in total

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3.  Unbuffered and buffered supply chains in human metabolism.

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5.  Evidence for a relationship between body mass and energy metabolism in the human brain.

Authors:  André Schmoller; Torben Hass; Olga Strugovshchikova; Uwe H Melchert; Harald G Scholand-Engler; Achim Peters; Ulrich Schweiger; Fritz Hohagen; Kerstin M Oltmanns
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7.  How the selfish brain organizes its supply and demand.

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8.  S100B Serum Levels in Schizophrenia Are Presumably Related to Visceral Obesity and Insulin Resistance.

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9.  Build-ups in the supply chain of the brain: on the neuroenergetic cause of obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  Achim Peters; Dirk Langemann
Journal:  Front Neuroenergetics       Date:  2009-04-28

10.  Multi-tissue coexpression networks reveal unexpected subnetworks associated with disease.

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