| Literature DB >> 34299356 |
Liya Kerem1,2, Elizabeth A Lawson1.
Abstract
The hypothalamic peptide oxytocin and its receptor are involved in a range of physiological processes, including parturition, lactation, cell growth, wound healing, and social behavior. More recently, increasing evidence has established the effects of oxytocin on food intake, energy expenditure, and peripheral metabolism. In this review, we provide a comprehensive description of the central oxytocinergic system in which oxytocin acts to shape eating behavior and metabolism. Next, we discuss the peripheral beneficial effects oxytocin exerts on key metabolic organs, including suppression of visceral adipose tissue inflammation, skeletal muscle regeneration, and bone tissue mineralization. A brief summary of oxytocin actions learned from animal models is presented, showing that weight loss induced by chronic oxytocin treatment is related not only to its anorexigenic effects, but also to the resulting increase in energy expenditure and lipolysis. Following an in-depth discussion on the technical challenges related to endogenous oxytocin measurements in humans, we synthesize data related to the association between endogenous oxytocin levels, weight status, metabolic syndrome, and bone health. We then review clinical trials showing that in humans, acute oxytocin administration reduces food intake, attenuates fMRI activation of food motivation brain areas, and increases activation of self-control brain regions. Further strengthening the role of oxytocin in appetite regulation, we review conditions of hypothalamic insult and certain genetic pathologies associated with oxytocin depletion that present with hyperphagia, extreme weight gain, and poor metabolic profile. Intranasal oxytocin is currently being evaluated in human clinical trials to learn whether oxytocin-based therapeutics can be used to treat obesity and its associated sequela. At the end of this review, we address the fundamental challenges that remain in translating this line of research to clinical care.Entities:
Keywords: appetite regulation; body weight; energy expenditure; fMRI; food intake; metabolism; oxytocin
Mesh:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34299356 PMCID: PMC8306733 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22147737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1The participation of oxytocin in appetite regulation and metabolism. Oxytocin is produced in parvocellular neurons located in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and in magnocellular neurons located in the PVN and supraoptic nucleus (SON). Shown in the figure are some of the oxytocinergic pathways affecting appetite and metabolism. Glutamate releasing ARC neurons that express the OXTR and project to melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) expressing neurons in the PVN (purple lines) induce rapid satiation when chemo- or optogenetically stimulated. Oxytocinergic neurons originating from the PVN and SON and reaching POMC OXTR expressing ARC neurons (yellow lines) also induce satiation. Somato-dendritic secretion of oxytocin from magnocellular cells (pink arrows) results in autocrine and paracrine local effects. Axonal oxytocinergic projections from the PVN (blue lines) reach multiple brain regions involved in shaping eating behavior (shown in the figure is the ventral tegmental area (VTA), nucleus accumbens (NA), amygdala (Amg), and the nucleus of solitary tract (NST)). Oxytocin synthesized in magnocellular cells is carried by axonal transport to the posterior pituitary (blue lines), where it is stored until release into the systemic circulation. Peripheral circulating oxytocin affects multiple organs to exert metabolic effects inducing lipolysis, increased fatty acid beta oxidation, brown adipose tissue thermogenesis, bone mineralization, and skeletal muscle regeneration.
Figure 2Proposed mechanism for the effects of oxytocin on thermogenesis and brown adipogenesis. Oxytocin may be an adipocyte browning inducer—in vitro treatment of pluripotent mesenchymal stem cells with oxytocin suppresses gene expression of white-adipose selective markers (Nnmt and Retn) while increasing expression of thermogenic genes (e.g., UCP-1, Cidea, Ppargc1a, Dio2, and Elovl3). Oxytocin also up-regulates PRDM16—a transcription factor that promotes brown adipose tissue (BAT) formation by binding to peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1 alpha (PPAR-gamma) and inducing brown adipogenesis from progenitor myoblasts. PRDM16 also suppressed white-adipocytes selective genes in BAT. Oxytocin also increases the expression of uncoupling protein-1 (UCP-1) in BAT and inguinal white adipose tissue (iWAT)/beige adipocytes. UCP-1 is a mitochondrial membranous protein that is uniquely expressed in brown adipocytes and has a pivotal role in BAT adaptive thermogenesis. UCP-1 promotes proton translocation through the inner membrane of brown adipocyte mitochondria, thus diverting respiration from ATP synthesis to energy dissipation in the form of heat. Specific cues (e.g., cold exposure) also increase UCP-1 expression and thermogenesis. In vivo, oxytocin enhances the expression of UCP-1 in both mice and rat BAT and iWAT, thus promoting thermogenesis.