Obesity wars: may the smell be with you.

Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab

Section of Retinal Ganglion Cell Biology, Laboratory of Retinal Cell and Molecular Biology, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The regulation of energy balance involves complex interactions between central and peripheral mechanisms that detect energy and nutrient levels, with key cellular players like hypothalamic AMPK responsible for controlling feeding, energy use, and glucose balance.
  • - Recent findings highlight the significant influence of traditional senses, particularly olfaction, on energy metabolism, demonstrating that our sense of smell is crucial for food selection and impacts thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue.
  • - The review focuses on how olfactory inputs not only affect feeding behaviors but also play a role in regulating overall energy expenditure and metabolism, indicating that our sense of smell has a bidirectional effect on energy balance.

Article Abstract

Classically, the regulation of energy balance has been based on central and peripheral mechanisms sensing energy, nutrients, metabolites, and hormonal cues. Several cellular mechanisms at central level, such as hypothalamic AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), integrate this information to elicit counterregulatory responses that control feeding, energy expenditure, and glucose homeostasis, among other processes. Recent data have added more complexity to the homeostatic regulation of metabolism by introducing, for example, the key role of "traditional" senses and sensorial information in this complicated network. In this regard, current evidence is showing that olfaction plays a key and bidirectional role in energy homeostasis. Although nutritional status dynamically and profoundly impacts olfactory sensitivity, the sense of smell is involved in food appreciation and selection, as well as in brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis and substrate utilization, with some newly described actors, such as olfactomedin 2 (OLFM2), likely playing a major role. Thus, olfactory inputs are contributing to the regulation of both sides of the energy balance equation, namely, feeding and energy expenditure (EE), as well as whole body metabolism. Here, we will review the current knowledge and advances about the role of olfaction in the regulation of energy homeostasis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10259866PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00040.2023DOI Listing

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