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Related Concept Videos

Peroxisomes01:24

Peroxisomes

Peroxisomes are specialized organelles present in fungi, plant, and animal cells. It can vary in number, size, morphology, and activity depending on the type of tissue and the nutritional state of the cell. For example, cells with active lipid metabolism, such as adipocytes, neurons, and hepatocytes, have more peroxisomes than other cells in the body. Besides their primary role in breaking down complex organic molecules, peroxisomes can also synthesize specific macromolecules and participate in...
Peroxisomes01:24

Peroxisomes

Peroxisomes are specialized organelles present in fungi, plant, and animal cells. It can vary in number, size, morphology, and activity depending on the type of tissue and the nutritional state of the cell. For example, cells with active lipid metabolism, such as adipocytes, neurons, and hepatocytes, have more peroxisomes than other cells in the body. Besides their primary role in breaking down complex organic molecules, peroxisomes can also synthesize specific macromolecules and participate in...
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Regulation of Food Intake

Short-term regulation of food intake primarily involves neural signals from the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, blood nutrient levels, and GI tract hormones. Communication between the gut and brain via vagal nerve fibers plays a significant role in evaluating the contents of the gut. Clinical studies have shown that protein ingestion produces a more prolonged response in these nerve fibers compared to an equivalent amount of glucose. Additionally, the activation of stretch receptors caused by GI...
Regulation of Metabolism01:19

Regulation of Metabolism

Cellular needs and conditions vary from cell to cell and change within individual cells over time. For example, the required enzymes and energetic demands of stomach cells are different from those of fat storage cells, skin cells, blood cells, and nerve cells. Furthermore, a digestive cell works much harder to process and break down nutrients during the time that closely follows a meal compared with many hours after a meal. As these cellular demands and conditions vary, so do the amounts and...
mTOR Signaling and Cancer Progression03:03

mTOR Signaling and Cancer Progression

The mammalian target of rapamycin or mTOR protein was discovered in 1994 due to its direct interaction with rapamycin. The protein gets its name from a yeast homolog called TOR. The mTOR protein complex in mammalian cells plays a major role in balancing anabolic processes such as the synthesis of proteins, lipids, and nucleotides and catabolic processes, such as autophagy in response to environmental cues, such as availability of nutrients and growth factors.
The mTOR pathway or the...
Protein Import into the Peroxisomes01:27

Protein Import into the Peroxisomes

Cells contain membrane-bound organelles called peroxisomes that oxidize organic molecules by transferring hydrogen atoms to oxygen, producing hydrogen peroxide. Peroxisomes enzymatically convert the released hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen.
Peroxisomal Protein Import:
Peroxisomes lack the genetic machinery required to code for their own proteins. Hence, most peroxisomal membrane, lumenal and transmembrane proteins are synthesized in the cytoplasm or ER and transported to the peroxisome...
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  1. Home
  2. Peroxisome Proliferation-associated Control Of Reactive Oxygen Species Sets Melanocortin Tone And Feeding In Diet-induced Obesity.
  1. Home
  2. Peroxisome Proliferation-associated Control Of Reactive Oxygen Species Sets Melanocortin Tone And Feeding In Diet-induced Obesity.

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Peroxisome proliferation-associated control of reactive oxygen species sets melanocortin tone and feeding in

Sabrina Diano1, Zhong-Wu Liu, Jin Kwon Jeong

  • 1Program in Integrative Cell Signaling and Neurobiology of Metabolism, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA. sabrina.diano@yale.edu

Nature Medicine
|August 30, 2011

View abstract on PubMed

Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) regulate feeding by influencing hypothalamic neurons. Peroxisome activity, modulated by PPAR-γ, affects ROS levels and energy balance, particularly in leptin resistance.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroendocrinology
  • Metabolic Regulation
  • Cellular Physiology

Background:

  • Hypothalamic reactive oxygen species (ROS) are implicated in melanocortin system regulation.
  • Leptin resistance, common in obesity, disrupts normal energy balance signaling.
  • The role of peroxisomes in hypothalamic energy metabolism remains largely unexplored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the role of hypothalamic peroxisomes and ROS in energy metabolism.
  • To elucidate the mechanism linking peroxisome activity, ROS, and neuronal signaling in obesity.
  • To understand how these processes are affected in states of leptin resistance.

Main Methods:

  • Manipulation of ROS levels in pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and neuropeptide Y/agouti-related peptide (NPY/AgRP) neurons.
  • Pharmacological modulation of peroxisome proliferation using PPAR-γ agonists and antagonists (rosiglitazone, GW9662).
  • Assessment of neuronal activity (c-fos, pStat3), feeding behavior, and ROS levels in lean and obese mouse models (ob/ob, diet-induced obesity).
  • Main Results:

    • Suppression of ROS reduced POMC activation and increased NPY/AgRP neuron activity and feeding.
    • High-fat diet increased hypothalamic peroxisomes and PPAR-γ, altering ROS-leptin correlation.
    • PPAR-γ activation decreased ROS and increased feeding; antagonism increased ROS and reduced feeding in DIO mice.

    Conclusions:

    • Hypothalamic peroxisomes and ROS are critical in regulating energy metabolism and feeding behavior.
    • PPAR-γ-mediated peroxisome modulation influences ROS levels and neuronal activity in the hypothalamus.
    • This pathway represents a novel mechanism in central energy metabolism, particularly relevant to leptin resistance.