| Literature DB >> 25225489 |
Abstract
Food is a potent natural reward and food intake is a complex process. Reward and gratification associated with food consumption leads to dopamine (DA) production, which in turn activates reward and pleasure centers in the brain. An individual will repeatedly eat a particular food to experience this positive feeling of gratification. This type of repetitive behavior of food intake leads to the activation of brain reward pathways that eventually overrides other signals of satiety and hunger. Thus, a gratification habit through a favorable food leads to overeating and morbid obesity. Overeating and obesity stems from many biological factors engaging both central and peripheral systems in a bi-directional manner involving mood and emotions. Emotional eating and altered mood can also lead to altered food choice and intake leading to overeating and obesity. Research findings from human and animal studies support a two-way link between three concepts, mood, food, and obesity. The focus of this article is to provide an overview of complex nature of food intake where various biological factors link mood, food intake, and brain signaling that engages both peripheral and central nervous system signaling pathways in a bi-directional manner in obesity.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; food; mood; obesity
Year: 2014 PMID: 25225489 PMCID: PMC4150387 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Complex two-way relationship linking food intake, mood, and obesity.
Summary of biological factors and food influencing mood, emotions, food intake, and brain signaling pathways.
| Chocolate | Increases pleasant feeling, reduce tension, and results in good mood via serotonin and cannabinoid receptors signaling | Ottley, |
| Caffeine | Enhances alertness and increases anxiety and results in withdrawal symptoms in some individuals | Rogers, |
| Omega-3 fatty acids | Influences neuroticism, mood, behavior, and plays a role in mood disorders. Omega-3 fatty acids in receptor functioning, neurotransmitters levels, and monoamine metabolism are all implicated in depression (see review Parker et al., | Lombard, |
| Micronutrients | Thiamine plays a role in emotion, mood states, and cognitive functioning. The pathway is unknown | Benton et al., |
| Iron | Iron deficiency results in depressed mood and lethargy. The pathway is unknown | Benton and Donohoe, |
| Folic acid | Folic acid deficiency is associated with depressed mood. The pathway is unknown | Coppen and Bolander-Gouaille, |
| Ghrelin | Linked to stress mediated food reward behavior, depression, and anxiety via ghrelin receptor signaling pathway | Schanze et al., |
| Serotonin | Linked to food intake, depression, and anxiety via serotonin receptor signaling pathway | Wurtman and Wurtman, |
| Dopamine | Linked to food reward behavior and mood via dopamine receptor signaling pathway | Cantello et al., |
| Leptin | Linked to food intake, depression, anxiety, and mood disorder via leptin receptor signaling pathway | Collin et al., |
| Adiponectin | Linked to depression and mood disorder. May involve adiponectin-induced inhibition of GSK-3β pathway | Arita et al., |
| Resistin | Indirect link to depression. The pathway is unknown | Krsek et al., |
| Insulin | Linked to mood, depression, anxiety and negative emotion via insulin receptor signaling | Gustafson et al., |