Fiche publication
Date publication
février 2024
Journal
The FEBS journal
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr BENANI Alexandre
,
Pr SAVARY Stéphane
,
Dr VEJUX Anne
,
Dr ANDREOLETTI Pierre
,
Pr CHERKAOUI-MALKI Mustapha
,
Dr TROMPIER Doriane
Tous les auteurs :
Salvi J, Andreoletti P, Audinat E, Balland E, Ben Fradj S, Cherkaoui-Malki M, Heurtaux T, Liénard F, Nédélec E, Rovère C, Savary S, Véjux A, Trompier D, Benani A
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
Maintaining energy balance is essential for survival and health. This physiological function is controlled by the brain, which adapts food intake to energy needs. Indeed, the brain constantly receives a multitude of biological signals that are derived from digested foods or that originate from the gastrointestinal tract, energy stores (liver and adipose tissues) and other metabolically active organs (muscles). These signals, which include circulating nutrients, hormones and neuronal inputs from the periphery, collectively provide information on the overall energy status of the body. In the brain, several neuronal populations can specifically detect these signals. Nutrient-sensing neurons are found in discrete brain areas and are highly enriched in the hypothalamus. In turn, specialized brain circuits coordinate homeostatic responses acting mainly on appetite, peripheral metabolism, activity and arousal. Accumulating evidence shows that hypothalamic microglial cells located at the vicinity of these circuits can influence the brain control of energy balance. However, microglial cells could have opposite effects on energy balance, that is homeostatic or detrimental, and the conditions for this shift are not totally understood yet. One hypothesis relies on the extent of microglial activation, and nutritional lipids can considerably change it.
Mots clés
Microglia, eating disorders, energy homeostasis, food intake, hypothalamus, inflammation, lipids
Référence
FEBS J. 2024 02;291(4):615-631