| Literature DB >> 25352770 |
Abstract
The cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) has been the subject of significant interest for over a decade. Work to decipher the detailed mechanism of CART function has been hampered by the lack of specific pharmacological tools like antagonists and the absence of a specific CART receptor(s). However, extensive research has been devoted to elucidate the role of the CART peptide and it is now evident that CART is a key neurotransmitter and hormone involved in the regulation of diverse biological processes, including food intake, maintenance of body weight, reward and addiction, stress response, psychostimulant effects and endocrine functions (Rogge et al., 2008; Subhedar et al., 2014). In this review, we focus on knowledge gained on CART's role in controlling appetite and energy homeostasis, and also address certain species differences between rodents and humans.Entities:
Keywords: CART; body weight; energy homeostasis; food intake; stress response
Year: 2014 PMID: 25352770 PMCID: PMC4195273 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Summary of the metabolic and behavioral effects of central CART administration via various intracerebroventricular and intranuclear delivery methods.
| 1998 | Kristensen et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding; ↓ Fast-induced feeding; ↓ NPY-induced feeding | N/A |
| 1998 | Lambert et al., | CART (55–59) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ~ Spontaneous feeding | N/A |
| 1998 | Lambert et al., | CART (55–76) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding; ↓ NPY-induced feeding | N/A |
| 1998 | Lambert et al., | CART (62–76) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding | N/A |
| 1998 | Thim et al., | CART I (55–102); CART II (62–102) | i.c.v. | Mouse | Standard chow | ↓ Fast-induced feeding | N/A |
| 1999 | Vrang et al., | CART I (42–89) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (in food-restricted animals) and ↓ NPY-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2000 | Edwards et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding | N/A |
| 2000 | Kask et al., | CART (62–76) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding | N/A |
| 2000 | Volkoff and Peter, | CART I (55–102); CART (62–76) | i.c.v. | Goldfish | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding and ↓ NPY-induced feeding (in food-restricted animals) | N/A |
| 2000 | Larsen et al., | CART I (42–89) | i.c.v. (chronic infusion) | Lean and obese Zucker ( | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (in both free-feeding and food-restricted animals); dose-dependent ↓ in body weight | Dose-dependent motor disturbances (combined gait and walking ataxia) |
| 2000 | Okumura et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Fast-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2000 | Wang et al., | CART I (55–102) | intra-PVN | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ NPY-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2001 | Bannon et al., | CART I (55–102); CART II (62–102) | i.c.v. | Mouse | Standard chow | ↓ Fast-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2001 | Abbott et al., | CART I (55–102) | Hypothalamic intranuclear injections (VMH, Arc, PVN, SON, DMH, LHA and AHA) | Rat | Standard chow | ↑ Spontaneous feeding (only measured in satiated animals cannulated into the DMH or Arc); ↑ Fast-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2001 | Abbott et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (3V) | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding; ↓ Fast-induced feeding (↓ feeding episodes) | Behavioral abnormalities marked by reduced feeding episodes, flat-backed posture and movement-associated tremors (behavioral analysis performed for 24-h fasted animals only but not satiated animals) |
| 2001 | Zheng et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (LV and 4V) | Rat | Sucrose solution or standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ short-term sucrose intake and ↓ overnight chow intake)—effects more pronounced in 4V compared to LV administration | Alterations in motor behavior (mild movement-associated tremors in part of 4V injected subjects) |
| 2001a | Aja et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. | Rat | Ensure liquid diet | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ liquid diet intake in licks and meal size in food restricted animals) | Altered oral motor function and behavioral alterations (trance-like state, flat-backed and arched-backed postures, cage licking, movement-associated tremors) |
| 2001b | Aja et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (3V) | Rat | Ensure liquid diet | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ liquid diet intake and observations of feeding in food restricted animals)—reductions significantly attentuated by aqueduct obstruction | Alterations in motor behavior (flat-backed and arched-backed postures and movement-associated tremors)—alterations significantly attentuated by aqueduct obstruction |
| 2001b | Aja et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (4V) | Rat | Ensure liquid diet | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ liquid diet intake and observations of feeding in food restricted animals)—reductions unaffected by aqueduct obstruction | Alterations in motor behavior (flat-backed and arched-backed postures and movement-associated tremors)—alterations unaffected by aqueduct obstruction |
| 2002 | Aja et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (4V) | Rat | Ensure liquid diet | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ liquid diet and water intake in food restricted animals); production of conditioned taste aversion | N/A |
| 2002 | Rohner-Jeanrenaud et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (chronic infusion) | Rat (normal and DIO) | Standard chow or HFD | ↓ Spontaneous feeding and ↓ NPY-induced feeding; ↓ body weight gain | N/A |
| 2002 | Zheng et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (4V) | Rat | Sucrose solution or standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ short-term sucrose intake)—effects more pronounced in 4V compared to intra-NTS administration | N/A |
| 2003 | Smedh and Moran, | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (4V) | Rat | Sucrose solution | ↓ Spontaneous feeding (↓ sucrose intake in food restricted animals); altered lick microstrcuture parameters | N/A |
| 2003 | Kong et al., | CART I (55–102) | intra-Arc | Rat | Standard chow | ↑ Spontaneous feeding (in both free-feeding and food-restricted animals) and ↑ Fast-induced feeding; ↑ cumulative body weight gain; ↑ body weight loss following 24-hr fasting and food restriction | N/A |
| 2004 | Wortley et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (3V) | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding | N/A |
| 2005 | Yang et al., | CART I (55–102) | intra-AcbSh | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding; ↓ Fast-induced feeding; ↓ GABA-A agonist muscimol-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2007 | Qing and Chen, | rat CART cDNA | i.c.v. | Rat (DIO) | High fat/high sucrose diet | ↓ Spontaneous feeding; ↓ Fast-induced feeding; ↓ body weight gain (↓ lean mass; fat mass unaffected) | N/A |
| 2007 | Jean et al., | CART I (55–102) | intra-AcbSh | Mouse | Standard chow | ↓ Fast-induced feeding | N/A |
| 2007 | Jean et al., | CART siRNA | intra-AcbSh | Mouse | Standard chow | ↑ Spontaneous feeding and ↓ stimulating 5-HT4R- or MDMA-induced anorexia in staved animals | N/A |
| 2008 | Smith et al., | rAAV encoding full length rat CART cDNA (GenBank accession no. U10071) | intra-PVN | Rat | Standard chow or HFD | ↑ Cumulative feeding and cumulative body weight gain; effects more accentuated on HFD | N/A |
| 2009 | Skibicka et al., | CART I (55–102) | i.c.v. (4V) or intra-NTS | Rat | Standard chow | [4V injection] | N/A |
| 2010 | Hou et al., | CART I (55–102) | intra-Arc; intra-DMH | Streptozotocin-diabetic rats | Standard chow or HFD | Chow diet: ↑ Spontaneous feeding (in satiated animals) (Arc) and ↑ Fast-induced feeding (DMH and Arc); HFD: ↑ Spontaneous feeding (Arc) | N/A |
| 2011 | Nakhate et al., | CART I (54–102) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding and body weight; attenuated social isolation-induced hyperphagia and body weight gain | N/A |
| 2013 | Nakhate et al., | CART I (54–102) | i.c.v. | Rat | Standard chow | ↓ Spontaneous feeding; attenuated ALLO-induced hyperphagia and weight gain; potentiated DHEAS-induced anorexia and weight loss | N/A |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; DIO, diet-induced obese; HFD, high fat diet; BAT, brown adipose tissue; i.c.v., intracerebroventricular; i.c., intracisternal; LV, lateral ventricle; 3V, third ventricle; 4V, fourth ventricle; Acb, nucleus accumbens; AcbSh, nucleus accumbens shell; AHA, anterior hypothalamic area; Arc, arcuate nucleus; DMH, dorsomedial nucleus; LHA, lateral hypothalamic area; NTS, nucleus of the solitary tract; PBN, parabrachial nucleus; PVN, paraventricular nucleus; SON, supraoptic nucleus; VMH, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus.
Effects on body weight described where results presented, otherwise either unaffected or information unavailable.
Effects on locomotor behavior described where results presented, otherwise either unaffected or information unavailable.
Cerebral aqueduct occlusion to interrupt forebrain-hindbrain CSF flow.
Inhibition of gastric function (suppression of gastric acid secretion and gastric emptying); inhibition of gastric acid secretion remained in vagotomized animals; inhibition of gastric acid secretion blocked by pretreatment with central administration of CRF receptor antagonist α-helical CRF9-41.
Inhibition of gastric function (suppression of gastric emptying); inhibition of gastric emptying blocked by pretreatment with central administration of CRF receptor antagonist α-helical CRF9-41; CART-induced inhibition of gastric emptying proposed unlikely to contribute to CART-mediated inhibition of food intake.
Acute administration through repeated injections and chronic overexpression using stereotactically targeted gene transfer.
Chronic overexpression using recombinant adeno-associated virus vector containing rat CART cDNA.
↑ Blood glucose levels; hyperglycemic response not altered by GLP-1R blockade in animals pre-treated with GLP-1R antagonist (exendin-9-39).
Induction of Fos expression in the PVN, DMH, SON and Arc (hypothalamus), central nucleus of amygdala (cerebrum), PBN and NTS (hindbrain).
Induction of Fos expression in NTS neurons.
↑ UCP-1 expression thermogenic capacity in BAT.
Summary of the metabolic phenotypes of germline .
Schematic representation of the gene targeting strategies adopted for generating CART knockout mouse models, depicting the wild-type allele of the mouse CART gene, the CART targeting vector, and the mutant CART allele. The three exons of the mouse CART gene are indicated by boxes labeled E1–E3. In the targeting constructs, the yellow boxes labeled “neo” or “HIS/neo” indicate the neomycin or histidinol/neomycin resistance selection cassettes respectively for targeted disruption of the CART gene. Homologous recombination between the targeting vectors and the complementary CART genomic loci (dotted lines) in mouse embryonic stem cells generates genetic ablations of exons E1 and E2, or all of exons E1–E3 of the CART coding region respectively. The targeting constructs were introduced into 129 SvJ mouse embryonic stem cells and subsequently injected into C57BL/6 blastocysts. M, male; F, female; HFD, high fat diet; NSD, no significant difference.
Examples of human studies demonstrating the association between genetic variations in the .
| Hager et al., | Genome-wide scan for human obesity-susceptibility loci using model-free multipoint linkage analysis | French Caucasian (514) | Overweight (72), obese (107), morbidly obese (196), and non-obese controls (139) | Chromosomal locus 5q13.2 ( | Higher allele frequencies in overweight and obese sibpairs | N/A | Linkage with ↑ serum leptin levels | ↑ Fasting glucose and insulin levels |
| Challis et al., | Mutational analysis and population genetics | British Caucasian (902) | Morbidly obese (91) and non-obese (811) | 1475A>G SNP (3′-UTR of exon 3) | NSD in allele frequency between obese and control subjects | Potential link to early-onset obesity; ↓ waist-to-hip ratio in male heterozygotes | Potential interference with fat distribution and contribution to dyslipidaemia | ↓ Fasting plasma insulin and fasting triglycerides in male heterozygotes |
| del Giudice et al., | Single-strand conformation polymorphism and automatic sequencing | Italian (230) | Obese (130) and non-obese controls (100) | Leu34Phe missense mutation in pro-CART (729G>C in exon 2) | A large family of obese subjects across three generations | Hyperphagia and severe early-onset obesity even when heterozygous for allele | Altered post-translational processing; intracellular missorting of proCART; bioactive CART deficiency in the serum; ↑ serum leptin levels | ↓ Resting metabolic rates; linked to type II diabetes |
| Yamada et al., | Single-strand conformation polymorphism and direct sequencing | Japanese (558) | Overweight and obese (528), non-obese controls (30) | 6 polymorphic sites at 5′-flanking region, e.g., −156A>G [corresponds to −175A>G (Guerardel et al., | Higher allele frequencies in obese subjects than controls | ↑ Genetic predisposition to obesity when in linkage disequliibrium | N/A | Potential association with type II diabetes |
| Guerardel et al., | Sequence variability screen and haplotype analysis | French Caucasian (660) | Morbidly obese (292) and non-obese controls (368) | 1475A>G SNP (3′-UTR of exon 3) | Higher allele frequencies in morbidly obese subjects than controls | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Guerardel et al., | Sequence variability screen and haplotype analysis | French Caucasian (989) | Morbidly obese (621) and non-obese controls (368) | 5′ SNPs: −3608T>C, −3607C>T, −1702C>T, −175A>G; 3′UTR SNP: ΔA1457 | Higher allele frequencies in morbidly obese subjects than controls; association enhanced with the SNP haplotype structure 3608T>C (or 175A>G) and −1702C>T, combined to ΔA1457 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Guerardel et al., | Sequence variability screen and haplotype analysis | French (2340) and Swiss (385) Caucasian | Moderately obese (619), morbidly obese (1006) and non-obese controls (1100) | −3608T>C SNP (promoter region) | Higher allele frequencies | ↑ Genetic predisposition to obesity | Potential modulation of nuclear protein binding affinity | N/A |
| Vasseur et al., | Sequence variability screen and haplotype analysis | French Caucasian (840) | General population sample | 5′ SNPs: −3608T>C, −1702C>T, −175A>G (promoter region) | NSD in allele frequency between subjects with different BMI; strong linkage disequilibrium between the SNPs, haplotypic effect attributed to −3608T>C | N/A | ↓ Plasma LDL-cholesterol level and LDL/HDL ratio; potential protection against atherogenesis | Potential association with lipid metabolism and atherogenicity |
| Rigoli et al., | Family-based association methods | Italian (320) | Overweight (103), obese (30) and non-obese controls (187) | 1475A>G SNP (3′-UTR of exon 3) | Higher allele frequencies in overweight (0.07) and obese (0.08) children compared to non-obese unrelated controls (children and/or adults) (0.02); preferential transmission of 1475G allele from heterozygous parents to overweight and obese offspring | Early-onset obesity | N/A | N/A |
With slight variation between different studies, body weight is categorized according to the body mass index (BMI): non-obese (<25 kg/m.