AI Article Synopsis

  • PGC-1α is a coactivator that plays a crucial role in regulating energy expenditure, and its absence in mice leads to obesity and increased food intake.
  • Research indicates that PGC-1α directly influences the expression of the neuropeptide oxytocin in the hypothalamus, which is involved in appetite control.
  • In zebrafish models, knocking down PGC-1α reduces oxytocin levels but can be restored by reintroducing PGC-1α or oxytocin, highlighting PGC-1α's essential role in stimulating oxytocin production related to energy intake.

Article Abstract

The transcriptional coactivator PGC-1α is a key regulator of cellular energy expenditure in peripheral tissues. Recent studies report that PGC-1α-null mice develop late-onset obesity and that the neuronal inactivation of PGC-1α causes increased food intake. However, the exact role of PGC-1α in the CNS remains unclear. Here we show that PGC-1α directly regulates the expression of the hypothalamic neuropeptide oxytocin, a known central regulator of appetite. We developed a unique genetic approach in the zebrafish, allowing us to monitor and manipulate PGC-1α activity in oxytocinergic neurons. We found that PGC-1α is coexpressed with oxytocin in the zebrafish hypothalamus. Targeted knockdown of the zebrafish PGC-1α gene activity caused a marked decrease in oxytocin mRNA levels and inhibited the expression of a transgenic GFP reporter driven by the oxytocin promoter. The effect of PGC-1α loss of function on oxytocin gene activity was rescued by tissue-specific re-expression of either PGC-1α or oxytocin precursor in zebrafish oxytocinergic neurons. PGC-1α activated the oxytocin promoter in a heterologous cell culture system, and overexpression of PGC-1α induced ectopic expression of oxytocin in muscles and neurons. Finally, PGC-1α forms an in vivo complex with the oxytocin promoter in fed but not fasted animals. These findings demonstrate that PGC-1α is both necessary and sufficient for the production of oxytocin, implicating hypothalamic PGC-1α in the direct activation of a hypothalamic hormone known to control energy intake.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6623572PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1798-11.2011DOI Listing

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