39 research outputs found

    Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 and its Analogues Act in the Dorsal Raphe and Modulate Central Serotonin to Reduce Appetite and Body Weight.

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    Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and serotonin play critical roles in energy balance regulation. Both systems are exploited clinically as anti-obesity strategies. Surprisingly whether they interact in order to regulate energy balance is poorly understood. Here we investigated mechanisms by which GLP-1 and serotonin interact at the level of the CNS. Serotonin depletion impaired the ability of exendin-4, a clinically utilized GLP-1 analogue, to reduce body weight in rats, suggesting serotonin is a critical mediator of the energy balance impact of GLP-1R activation. Serotonin turnover and expression of 5HT2A and 5HT2C serotonin receptors in the hypothalamus were altered by GLP-1R activation. We demonstrate that 5HT2A, but surprisingly not 5HT2C, receptor is critical for weight-loss, anorexia and fat mass reduction induced by central GLP-1R activation. Importantly, central 5HT2A receptors are also required for peripherally injected liraglutide to reduce feeding and weight. Dorsal raphe (DR) harbors cell bodies of serotonin producing neurons that supply serotonin to the hypothalamic nuclei. We show that GLP-1R stimulation in DR is sufficient to induce hypophagia and increase electrical activity of the DR serotonin neurons. Finally our results disassociate brain metabolic and emotionality pathways impacted by GLP-1R activation. This study identifies serotonin as new critical neural substrate for GLP-1 impact on energy homeostasis, and expands the current map of brain areas impacted by GLP-1R activation.This research was funded by the Swedish Research Council (2014-2945 and 2013-7107), Novo Nordisk Foundation Excellence project grant, Ragnar Söderberg Foundation, Harald Jeanssons Stiftelse and Greta Jeanssons Stiftelse, and Magnus Bergvalls Stiftelse

    Dichotomy of Tyrosine Hydroxylase and Dopamine Regulation between Somatodendritic and Terminal Field Areas of Nigrostriatal and Mesoaccumbens Pathways

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    Measures of dopamine-regulating proteins in somatodendritic regions are often used only as static indicators of neuron viability, overlooking the possible impact of somatodendritic dopamine (DA) signaling on behavior and the potential autonomy of DA regulation between somatodendritic and terminal field compartments. DA reuptake capacity is less in somatodendritic regions, possibly placing a greater burden on de novo DA biosynthesis within this compartment to maintain DA signaling. Therefore, regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) activity may be particularly critical for somatodendritic DA signaling. Phosphorylation of TH at ser31 or ser40 can increase activity, but their impact on L-DOPA biosynthesis in vivo is unknown. Thus, determining their relationship with L-DOPA tissue content could reveal a mechanism by which DA signaling is normally maintained. In Brown-Norway Fischer 344 F1 hybrid rats, we quantified TH phosphorylation versus L-DOPA accumulation. After inhibition of aromatic acid decarboxylase, L-DOPA tissue content per recovered TH protein was greatest in NAc, matched by differences in ser31, but not ser40, phosphorylation. The L-DOPA per catecholamine and DA turnover ratios were significantly greater in SN and VTA, suggesting greater reliance on de novo DA biosynthesis therein. These compartmental differences reflected an overall autonomy of DA regulation, as seen by decreased DA content in SN and VTA, but not in striatum or NAc, following short-term DA biosynthesis inhibition from local infusion of the TH inhibitor α-methyl-p-tyrosine, as well as in the long-term process of aging. Such data suggest ser31 phosphorylation plays a significant role in regulating TH activity in vivo, particularly in somatodendritic regions, which may have a greater reliance on de novo DA biosynthesis. Thus, to the extent that somatodendritic DA release affects behavior, TH regulation in the midbrain may be critical for DA bioavailability to influence behavior

    Central administration of dopamine D3 receptor antisense to rat: effects on locomotion, dopamine release and [H-3]spiperone binding

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    A 15-mer, all-phosphorothioate-modified antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ASO) targeted against rat dopamine D3 receptor mRNA (4 mu M, 5 days) significantly reduced (28%) the amount of binding sites labelled with [H-3]spiperone in monolayer cultured Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells transfected with the complementary desoxy ribonucleic acid (cDNA) for the rat D3 receptor. In contrast, D3-ASO treatment did not reduce the amount of bound [H-3]spiperone in CHO cells transfected with D2 receptor cDNA. Intracerebroventricular infusion of D3-ASO (osmotic minipump, 10 mu g/mu l/h, 7 days) influenced dopamine receptor density in the limbic forebrain such that the upper part of the dopamine/[H-3] spiperone displacement curve tentatively representing the D3 receptor - was altered significantly. Spontaneous locomotor activity of non-habituated rats was increased significantly in D3-ASO-treated animals; in addition, in vivo microdialysis revealed a moderate increase in dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens in these animals. In all experiments, an oligodeoxynucleotide comprising the same nucleotides as the antisense sequence, but in random order, was used as control. It is concluded that the antisense strategy is useful for investigating the functional role of dopamine D3 receptors and that the dopamine D3 receptor is involved in rat locomotor behaviour

    CHARACTERIZATION AND PHARMACOLOGICAL RESPONSIVENESS OF DOPAMINE RELEASE RECORDED BY MICRODIALYSIS IN THE SUBSTANTIA-NIGRA OF CONSCIOUS RATS

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    The extracellular concentration of dopamine (DA) and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid in the substantia nigra (SN) and striatum was estimated by microdialysis. The dialysate content of DA from the SN was recorded during infusion of a DA uptake blocker (nomifensine; 5-mu-mol/L) dissolved in the perfusion fluid. Perfusion of tetrodotoxin (1-mu-mol/L) produced a virtually complete disappearance of nigral and striatal DA release. Dendritic as well as terminal release of DA was inhibited for several hours when the nerve impulse flow in dopaminergic neurons was blocked by systemic administration of gamma-butyrolactone (750 mg/kg, i.p.). The systemic administration (0.3 mg/kg, i.p.) as well as infusion (1-mu-mol/L) of the D2 agonist (-)-N-0437 [2-(n-propyl-N-2-thienylethylamino)-5-hydroxytetralin] produced a significant decrease in the release of DA in both the striatum and the SN. DA levels were recorded in the striatum both with and without addition of nomifensine to the perfusion fluid. The decrease in the striatum after (-)-N-0437 was suppressed in the presence of nomifensine. Infusion (1-mu-mol/L) as well as systemic administration (40 mg/kg) of sulpiride caused a similar increase in the release of striatal DA; this increase was, in both experiments, potentiated by nomifensine coinfusion. Sulpiride administration induced a small increase in the release of nigral DA. Infusion of (-)-N-0437 or (-)-sulpiride into the nigra caused a moderate decrease and increase, respectively, of striatal DA level. It was possible to estimate the relative contribution of nigral and striatal autoreceptors to the typical changes in striatal DA release seen after peripheral administration of D2 agonists or antagonists. These results suggest that the dendritic release of DA fulfills classical release criteria
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