| Literature DB >> 36131679 |
Abstract
Obesity is a worldwide health, economic and social concern, despite efforts made to counteract the spreading wave of eating and nourishment-associated disorders. The review aims to show how the glial cells, astrocytes, contribute to the central regulation of appetite and energy metabolism. The hypothalamus is the brain center responsible for nutrients and nutritional hormone sensing, signal processing, and execution of metabolic and behavioral responses, directed at sustaining energy homeostasis. The astrocytes are endowed with receptors, transporters and enzymatic machinery responsible for glucose, lactate, fatty acids, ketone bodies, as well as leptin or ghrelin transport and metabolism, and that render them supporters and partners for neurons in governing the brain and body energy intake and expenditure. However, the role of astrocytes associated with brain energy metabolism reaches far beyond simple fuel contingent-they contribute to cognitive performance. The cognitive decline which often accompanies high fat- and/or high-calorie diets and correlates with neuroinflammation and astrogliosis, is a major concern. The last two decades of research enabled us to acknowledge the astroglia in obesity-associated dysfunctions and to investigate astrocytes as contributors to the pathology, as well as targets for therapy.Entities:
Keywords: astrocytes; astrocytosis; brain energy metabolism; hypothalamic inflammation; obesity
Year: 2022 PMID: 36131679 PMCID: PMC9548436 DOI: 10.7555/JBR.36.20200020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Res ISSN: 1674-8301
The exemplary rodent models of obesity
| Type of the obesity model | Underlying mechanism |
| For the extensive description of the animals used in obesity studies, please see the reviews[ | |
| Diet-based models | Exceeded calories intake in mice or rats: high-fat diet, high-carbohydrate diet, 'cafeteria' diet |
| Monogenic obesity models | Spontaneous mutation in the gene coding for leptin ( |
| Polygenic obesity models | Selected, susceptible for obesity, inbred strains of mice (New Zealand obese mouse, Tsumura Suzuki obese diabetes mouse) or rats (Wistar Ottawa Karlsburg W Rat, Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty Rat) |
| Surgical models | Lesions of hypothalamus nuclei ( |