Literature DB >> 29101261

Butyrate reduces appetite and activates brown adipose tissue via the gut-brain neural circuit.

Zhuang Li1,2, Chun-Xia Yi3, Saeed Katiraei4, Sander Kooijman1,2, Enchen Zhou1,2, Chih Kit Chung1, Yuanqing Gao3, José K van den Heuvel1,2, Onno C Meijer1,2, Jimmy F P Berbée1,2, Marieke Heijink5, Martin Giera5, Ko Willems van Dijk2,4, Albert K Groen6,7, Patrick C N Rensen1,2, Yanan Wang1,2,7.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Butyrate exerts metabolic benefits in mice and humans, the underlying mechanisms being still unclear. We aimed to investigate the effect of butyrate on appetite and energy expenditure, and to what extent these two components contribute to the beneficial metabolic effects of butyrate.
DESIGN: Acute effects of butyrate on appetite and its method of action were investigated in mice following an intragastric gavage or intravenous injection of butyrate. To study the contribution of satiety to the metabolic benefits of butyrate, mice were fed a high-fat diet with butyrate, and an additional pair-fed group was included. Mechanistic involvement of the gut-brain neural circuit was investigated in vagotomised mice.
RESULTS: Acute oral, but not intravenous, butyrate administration decreased food intake, suppressed the activity of orexigenic neurons that express neuropeptide Y in the hypothalamus, and decreased neuronal activity within the nucleus tractus solitarius and dorsal vagal complex in the brainstem. Chronic butyrate supplementation prevented diet-induced obesity, hyperinsulinaemia, hypertriglyceridaemia and hepatic steatosis, largely attributed to a reduction in food intake. Butyrate also modestly promoted fat oxidation and activated brown adipose tissue (BAT), evident from increased utilisation of plasma triglyceride-derived fatty acids. This effect was not due to the reduced food intake, but explained by an increased sympathetic outflow to BAT. Subdiaphragmatic vagotomy abolished the effects of butyrate on food intake as well as the stimulation of metabolic activity in BAT.
CONCLUSION: Butyrate acts on the gut-brain neural circuit to improve energy metabolism via reducing energy intake and enhancing fat oxidation by activating BAT. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

Entities:  

Keywords:  appetite; brain/gut interaction; energy metabolism; obesity; short-chain fatty acids

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29101261     DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2017-314050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gut        ISSN: 0017-5749            Impact factor:   23.059


  126 in total

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