| Literature DB >> 31718027 |
Thomas Ho-Yin Lee1, Kenneth King-Yip Cheng2, Ruby Lai-Chong Hoo3, Parco Ming-Fai Siu4, Suk-Yu Yau1.
Abstract
First seen as a fat-storage tissue, the adipose tissue is considered as a critical player in the endocrine system. Precisely, adipose tissue can produce an array of bioactive factors, including cytokines, lipids, and extracellular vesicles, which target various systemic organ systems to regulate metabolism, homeostasis, and immune response. The global effects of adipokines on metabolic events are well defined, but their impacts on brain function and pathology remain poorly defined. Receptors of adipokines are widely expressed in the brain. Mounting evidence has shown that leptin and adiponectin can cross the blood-brain barrier, while evidence for newly identified adipokines is limited. Significantly, adipocyte secretion is liable to nutritional and metabolic states, where defective circuitry, impaired neuroplasticity, and elevated neuroinflammation are symptomatic. Essentially, neurotrophic and anti-inflammatory properties of adipokines underlie their neuroprotective roles in neurodegenerative diseases. Besides, adipocyte-secreted lipids in the bloodstream can act endocrine on the distant organs. In this article, we have reviewed five adipokines (leptin, adiponectin, chemerin, apelin, visfatin) and two lipokines (palmitoleic acid and lysophosphatidic acid) on their roles involving in eating behavior, neurotrophic and neuroprotective factors in the brain. Understanding and regulating these adipokines can lead to novel therapeutic strategies to counteract metabolic associated eating disorders and neurodegenerative diseases, thus promote brain health.Entities:
Keywords: adipokine; adipose-brain axis; brain health; depression; neurodegeneration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31718027 PMCID: PMC6887733 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20225638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Effects of adipokines on neuroplasticity, neuroprotection, and cognitive behaviors.
| Animal Model | Treatment | Delivery Route | Neurological Effects | References | Year | |
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| C57BL/6J | mice | 14 days 1 mg/kg recombinant rat leptin | i.p. |
Increased cell proliferation and survival in the hippocampal dentate gyrus | Garza et al. [ | 2008 |
| C57BL/6JJ | mice | 30 min after injecting 1 mg/kg leptin | i.p. |
Reduced depressive behavior in forced swim and tail suspension tests | Liu et al. [ | 2010 |
| 4 and 12 m.o. SAM-P8 | mice | 0.25–0.5 µg mouse recombinant leptin post-training | Intra-hippo |
Improved memory retention in T-maze footshock avoidance and step-down inhibitory avoidance. | Farr et al. [ | 2006 |
| Sprague-DawleyJ | rats | 1.0 µM leptin | Intra-DG |
Enhanced LTP | Wayner et al. [ | 2004 |
| 6 m.o. TgCRND8 AD | mice | 8 weeks 20 µg leptin daily | Systemic infusion by osmotic pump |
Improved object recognition Improved fear-associated learning | Greco et al. [ | 2010 |
| Aβ1-42-assaulted | rat | 10 days 1 µg leptin daily | i.c.v. |
Improved spatial memory in Y maze and water maze Enhanced LTP | Tong et al. [ | 2015 |
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| HFD-induced stress and naïve C57BL/6J | mice | 0.1–0.3 µg globular adiponectin | i.c.v |
Reduced depressive behavior | Liu et al. [ | 2012 |
| C57BL/6J | mice | Overexpression of adiponectin by adenovirus | i.c.v |
Reduced depressive behavior in forced swim test | Yau et al. [ | 2014 |
| Sedentary or environmentally enriched C57BL/6J | mice | 1 mg/kg globular adiponectin | i.v. |
Reduced depressive behavior in forced swim test | Nicolas et al. [ | 2015 |
| Corticosterone-induced stress C57BL/6J | mice | 0.3 µg globular adiponectin | i.c.v. |
Reduced microglial response Reduced pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion from microglia | Chabry et al. [ | 2015 |
| mice | 10 mg/kg rosiglitazone 1 or 3 h before test | i.p. |
Reduced depressive and anxiety-like behavior | Guo et al. [ | 2017 | |
| STZ-infused Sprague–Dawley | rats | 0.1 µg/g adiponectin | i.c.v. |
Improved learning and memory Increased hippocampal dendritic and spine complexities Reduced tau hyperphosphorylation | Xu et al. [ | 2018 |
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| Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy in P10 | rats | 9 μg/kg rh-chemerin, 3 doses | i.n. |
Better learning and memory functions Reduced apoptosis | Zhang et al. [ | 2019 |
| LPS-induced depression | mice | 500 ng chemerin | i.c.v. |
Reduced depressive behavior in forced swim and tail suspension tests | Deyama et al. [ | 2018 |
| LPS-induced depression | mice | Resolvin E1 | i.c.v. (1 ng) and bilateral intra-mPFC and intra-DG (50 pg/side) |
Reduced depressive behavior in forced swim and tail suspension tests | Deyama et al. [ | 2018 |
| LPS-induced depression | mice | 10 ng resolvin E2 | i.c.v. |
Reduced depressive behavior in forced swim and tail suspension tests | Deyama et al. [ | 2018 |
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| Cerebral I/R Wistar | rats | 50 ng/kg apelin-13 post-ischemia | i.c.v. |
Reduced infarct volume | Xin et al. [ | 2015 |
| Cerebral I/R | mice | 50 ng/kg apelin-13 post-ischemia | i.c.v. |
Decreased BBB permeability | Chu et al. [ | 2017 |
| Cerebral I/R | mice | 4 mg/kg, 3 doses for three days post-ischemia | i.n. |
Reduced infarct Reduced neuronal apoptosis | Chen et al. [ | 2015 |
| TBI CD-1 | mice | 50 µg apelin-13 | i.c.v. |
Suppressed autophagy | Bao et al. [ | 2015 |
| STZ-infused AD Sprague–Dawley | rats | 2 µg, daily for 4 weeks | i.c.v. |
Improved object and spatial recognition Suppressed neuroinflammation | Luo et al. [ | 2019 |
| Forced-swimming stressed Wistar | rats | 2 µg, three doses in 24 h before FST | i.c.v. |
Reduced hedonic deficit in learned helplessness Improve object recognition | Li et al. [ | 2016 |
| Chronic water-immersion restraint stress Wistar | rats | 2 µg, daily for 7 days | i.c.v. |
Reduced depressive behavior in sucrose preference and tail suspension tests | Dai et al. [ | 2018 |
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| Cerebral I/R | mice | pThy1:NAMPT | transgenic |
Reduced infarct volume Reduced neurological deficits Increased striatal and corpus callosum myelination | Jing et al. [ | 2014 |
| Cerebral I/R Wistar | rats | 100 ng visfatin during reperfusion | Intra-CA |
Suppressed apoptosis Enhanced anti-apoptotic mechanism | Erfani et al. [ | 2015 |
| Cerebral I/R C57BL/6J | mice | pIRES2::NAMPT | transgenic |
Improved learning and memory | Zhao et al. [ | 2015 |
| Cerebral I/R C57BL/6J | mice | 500 mg/kg NMN daily for 7 days | i.p. |
Promoted hippocampal neurogenesis | Zhao et al. [ | 2015 |
| Aβ-infused AD Sprague-Dawley | rats | 500 mg/kg NMN daily for 10 days | i.p. |
Improved learning and memory | Wang et al. [ | 2016 |
| Tg2576 AD | mice | 250 mg/kg nicotinamide riboside daily for 3 months | i.p. |
Improved object recognition Increased cortical NAD+ Abolished long-term potentiation deficits | Gong et al. [ | 2013 |
Figure 1Potential mechanism of adipokine actions on brain health. Adiponectin and leptin can cross the blood–brain barrier to promote neuroplasticity. Other adipokines and lipokines show profound effects on mediating neurogenic and neuroinflammatory mechanisms.