Litcius/Paper detail

A subcortical feeding circuit linking an interoceptive node to jaw movement

Christin Kosse, Jessica Ivanov, Zachary A. Knight, Kyle Pellegrino, Jeffrey M. Friedman

2024Nature23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The brain processes an array of stimuli, enabling the selection of appropriate behavioural responses, but the neural pathways linking interoceptive inputs to outputs for feeding are poorly understood 1–3 . Here we delineate a subcortical circuit in which brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)-expressing neurons in the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) directly connect interoceptive inputs to motor centres, controlling food consumption and jaw movements. VMH BDNF neuron inhibition increases food intake by gating motor sequences of feeding through projections to premotor areas of the jaw. When food is unavailable, VMH BDNF inhibition elicits consummatory behaviours directed at inanimate objects such as wooden blocks, and inhibition of perimesencephalic trigeminal area (pMe5) projections evokes rhythmic jaw movements. The activity of these neurons is decreased during food consumption and increases when food is in proximity but not consumed. Activity is also increased in obese animals and after leptin treatment. VMH BDNF neurons receive monosynaptic inputs from both agouti-related peptide (AgRP) and proopiomelanocortin neurons in the arcuate nucleus (Arc), and constitutive VMH BDNF activation blocks the orexigenic effect of AgRP activation. These data indicate an Arc → VMH BDNF → pMe5 circuit that senses the energy state of an animal and regulates consummatory behaviours in a state-dependent manner.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceArcuate nucleusArc (geometry)HypothalamusNeophobiaLateral hypothalamusOrexigenicPremovement neuronal activityNeurotrophic factorsBiologyPsychologyInternal medicineMedicineNeuropeptideDevelopmental psychologyNeuropeptide Y receptorGeometryReceptorMathematicsRegulation of Appetite and ObesityNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorSleep and Wakefulness Research