AI Article Synopsis

  • The hypothalamus has lots of different neurons that control behavior and metabolism, and these neurons can change over time.
  • Researchers found special 'Ghost' neurons, which don't act like regular ones and were previously unnoticed by other methods.
  • The number of Ghost neurons increases in mice that gain weight from unhealthy diets, but they can change back when the mice lose weight, showing that neurons can adapt based on diet.

Article Abstract

The hypothalamus contains a remarkable diversity of neurons that orchestrate behavioural and metabolic outputs in a highly plastic manner. Neuronal diversity is key to enabling hypothalamic functions and, according to the neuroscience dogma, it is predetermined during embryonic life. Here, by combining lineage tracing of hypothalamic pro-opiomelanocortin (Pomc) neurons with single-cell profiling approaches in adult male mice, we uncovered subpopulations of 'Ghost' neurons endowed with atypical molecular and functional identity. Compared to 'classical' Pomc neurons, Ghost neurons exhibit negligible Pomc expression and are 'invisible' to available neuroanatomical approaches and promoter-based reporter mice for studying Pomc biology. Ghost neuron numbers augment in diet-induced obese mice, independent of neurogenesis or cell death, but weight loss can reverse this shift. Our work challenges the notion of fixed, developmentally programmed neuronal identities in the mature hypothalamus and highlight the ability of specialised neurons to reversibly adapt their functional identity to adult-onset obesogenic stimuli.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11043070PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47877-2DOI Listing

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