AI Article Synopsis

  • Dopamine-producing TH neurones in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus regulate ghrelin signaling and body weight, with RhoA playing a crucial role in this process.
  • Increased obesity correlates with heightened phosphorylation of TH, suggesting more active TH neurones linked to higher body weight.
  • TH-RhoA mice show greater sensitivity to ghrelin, impaired response to leptin, and gain more weight on a high-fat high-sucrose diet, highlighting RhoA's impact on ghrelin resistance and food intake regulation.

Article Abstract

Dopamine-producing tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) neurones in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) have recently been shown to be involved in ghrelin signalling and body weight homeostasis. In the present study, we investigate the role of the intracellular regulator RhoA in hypothalamic TH neurones in response to peripheral hormones. Diet-induced obesity was found to be associated with increased phosphorylation of TH in ARC, indicating obesity-associated increased activity of ARC TH neurones. Mice in which RhoA was specifically knocked out in TH neurones (TH-RhoA mice) were more sensitive to the orexigenic effect of peripherally administered ghrelin and displayed an abolished response to the anorexigenic hormone leptin. When TH-RhoA mice were challenged with a high-fat high-sucrose (HFHS) diet, they became hyperphagic and gained more body weight and fat mass compared to wild-type control mice. Importantly, lack of RhoA prevented development of ghrelin resistance, which is normally observed in wild-type mice after long-term HFHS diet feeding. Patch-clamp electrophysiological analysis demonstrated increased ghrelin-induced excitability of TH neurones in lean TH-RhoA mice compared to lean littermate control animals. Additionally, increased expression of the orexigenic hypothalamic neuropeptides agouti-related peptide and neuropeptide Y was observed in TH-RhoA mice. Overall, our data indicate that TH neurones in ARC are important for the regulation of body weight homeostasis and that RhoA is both a central effector in these neurones and important for the development of obesity-induced ghrelin resistance. The obese phenotype of TH-RhoA mice may be a result of increased sensitivity to ghrelin and decreased sensitivity to leptin, resulting in increased food intake.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jne.12761DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Dopamine-producing TH neurones in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus regulate ghrelin signaling and body weight, with RhoA playing a crucial role in this process.
  • Increased obesity correlates with heightened phosphorylation of TH, suggesting more active TH neurones linked to higher body weight.
  • TH-RhoA mice show greater sensitivity to ghrelin, impaired response to leptin, and gain more weight on a high-fat high-sucrose diet, highlighting RhoA's impact on ghrelin resistance and food intake regulation.
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