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Publication : Role of hypothalamic melanocortin system in adaptation of food intake to food protein increase in mice.

First Author  Pillot B Year  2011
Journal  PLoS One Volume  6
Issue  4 Pages  e19107
PubMed ID  21544212 Mgi Jnum  J:172374
Mgi Id  MGI:5007572 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0019107
Citation  Pillot B, et al. (2011) Role of hypothalamic melanocortin system in adaptation of food intake to food protein increase in mice. PLoS One 6(4):e19107
abstractText  The hypothalamic melanocortin system-the melanocortin receptor of type 4 (MC4R) and its ligands: alpha-melanin-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH, agonist, inducing hypophagia), and agouti-related protein (AgRP, antagonist, inducing hyperphagia)-is considered to play a central role in the control of food intake. We tested its implication in the mediation of the hunger-curbing effects of protein-enriched diets (PED) in mice. Whereas there was a 20% decrease in food intake in mice fed on the PED, compared to mice fed on an isocaloric starch-enriched diet, there was a paradoxical decrease in expression of the hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin gene, precursor of alpha-MSH, and increase in expression of the gene encoding AgRP. The hypophagia effect of PED took place in mice with invalidation of either MC4R or POMC, and was even strengthened in mice with ablation of the AgRP-expressing neurons. These data strongly suggest that the hypothalamic melanocortin system does not mediate the hunger-curbing effects induced by changes in the macronutrient composition of food. Rather, the role of this system might be to defend the body against the variations in food intake generated by the nutritional environment.
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