Background & Aims: Visceral sensory information is transmitted to the brain through the afferent vagus nerve. Ghrelin, a peptide primarily produced in the stomach, stimulates both feeding and growth hormone (GH) secretion. How stomach-derived ghrelin exerts these central actions is still unknown. Here we determined the role of the gastric afferent vagal nerve in ghrelin's functions.
Methods: Food intake and GH secretion were examined after an administration of ghrelin intravenously (IV) to rats with vagotomy or perivagal application of capsaicin, a specific afferent neurotoxin. We investigated Fos expression in neuropeptide Y (NPY)-producing and growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH)-producing neurons by immunohistochemistry after administration IV of ghrelin to these rats. The presence of the ghrelin receptor in vagal afferent neurons was assessed by using reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction and in situ hybridization histochemistry. A binding study on the vagus nerve by (125)I-ghrelin was performed to determine the transport of the ghrelin receptor from vagus afferent neurons to the periphery. We recorded the electric discharge of gastric vagal afferent induced by ghrelin and compared it with that by cholecystokinin (CCK), an anorectic gut peptide.
Results: Blockade of the gastric vagal afferent abolished ghrelin-induced feeding, GH secretion, and activation of NPY-producing and GHRH-producing neurons. Ghrelin receptors were synthesized in vagal afferent neurons and transported to the afferent terminals. Ghrelin suppressed firing of the vagal afferent, whereas CCK stimulated it.
Conclusions: This study indicated that the gastric vagal afferent is the major pathway conveying ghrelin's signals for starvation and GH secretion to the brain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/gast.2002.35954 | DOI Listing |
Nat Metab
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Neuroscience Institute, College of Arts and Sciences, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
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Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 75275, USA.
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Autonomic Physiology Laboratory, Faculty of Life Science and Human Technology, Nara Women's University, Kita-Uoya Nishimachi, Nara, 630-8506, Japan.
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Daniel Baugh Institute for Functional Genomics and Computational Biology, Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Loss of cardiac physiological function following myocardial infarction (MI) is accompanied by neural adaptations in the baroreflex that are compensatory in the short term, but then become associated with long-term disease progression. One marker of these adaptations is decreased baroreflex sensitivity, a strong predictor of post-MI mortality. The relative contributions of cardiac remodelling and neural adaptation in the sensory, central brainstem and peripheral ganglionic loci to baroreflex sensitivity changes remain underexplored.
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March 2025
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Primorska, Izola, Slovenia. Electronic address:
Energy balance and body weight are tightly regulated by homeostatic and hedonic systems of the brain. These systems are ultimately finely tuned by hypothalamic and extrahypothalamic neurocircuitry that modulate feeding and the appetite signalling cascade. The hypothalamus has been extensively researched and its role in homeostatic regulation of energy balance is well established.
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