Home

Donate

Support 

Contact 

Breaking News 

FAQ 

Links 

April 11, 2006 - HAP1 Protein Links Circulating Insulin to Brain Circuits That Regulate Feeding Behavior in Mice

Neural Pathway Could Provide Future Drug Targets for Eating Disorders

LA JOLLA,CA. Scientists collaborating from Emory University, the Burnham Institute for Medical Research, Rockefeller University, and the University of California at San Diego have discovered how the protein Hap1, which is abundant in the brain's hypothalamus, serves as the link between circulating insulin in the blood and the neural circuitry that controls feeding behavior in mice. Illumination of the neural pathway used by hormones to regulate appetite and eating behavior could eventually provide new drug targets for treating eating disorders and obesity. The research, to be published on May 1 in the journal Nature Medicine, has been made available to the research community by posting online at the journal’s website.

The hypothalamus serves as the central switching control for neural signals that regulate food intake and energy balance. Hormones such as insulin and leptin, which circulate in the blood plasma, are known to play an important role in regulating the brain's feeding signals, but scientists have not fully understood how these hormones interact with the brain circuitry. Neurotransmitters in the hypothalamus, including GABA (gamma aminobutyric acid), are known to be an important part of the pathway that regulates feeding behavior.

Scientists at Emory University School of Medicine had previously identified the Hap1 protein as crucial for the normal function of the hypothalamus. In experiments with knockout mice in which the Hap1 gene was eliminated, the mice failed to eat after birth. In addition, deleting Hap1 caused degeneration of some neurons in the hypothalamus.

In order to find out more about the function of Hap1 and the neural pathways it employs, a team of scientists from Emory, The Rockefeller University, the Burnham Institute for Medical Research, and the University of California, San Diego, conducted a series of experiments in mice. They found that fasting increased the level of Hap1 in the hypothalamus of the mice and that administering insulin decreased the Hap1 level. Suppressing Hap1 expression through RNA interference reduced mouse food intake and body weight. They also found that reducing Hap1 decreased the level and activity of GABA receptors in the hypothalamus.

"We concluded that increased levels of Hap1 correlated with increased feeding behavior in the mice, and our research helps explain how Hap1 is linked to feeding-related molecules such as insulin, and to hypothalamic neuronal function," said Xiao-Jiang Li, PhD, professor of human genetics at Emory University School of Medicine and senior author of the study. "GABA is known to have a stimulating effect on feeding behavior. Because insulin decreases Hap1 levels, and reducing Hap1 decreases the GABA receptor activity, we believe Hap1 is the link between circulating insulin and the regulation of GABA receptors in the hypothalamus in controlling eating behavior."

"Scientists know that diabetes and obesity are related to abnormalities of hypothalamic function," Li said. "This is a complicated pathway, and Hap1 can help us explain it and hopefully manipulate it to treat disorders associated with abnormal energy balance in the brain."

Stuart A. Lipton, MD, PhD, director and professor of the Center for Neuroscience and Aging at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research in La Jolla, further stated, “the new work opens up additional targets for obesity research. For example, a drug that decreases Hap1 in the hypothalamus would decrease the electrical drive that underlies eating behavior, resulting in weight loss and potentially longer lifespan.”

Lead author of the paper is Emory postdoctoral fellow Guoqing Sheng, PhD. Other authors include Guo-quing Chang and Sarah F. Leibowitz from The Rockefeller University; Stuart A. Lipton, John Y. Lin, and Gang Tong from the Burnham Institute for Medical Research and The University of California, San Diego; and Zhao-Xue Yu, Zhi-Hui Fang, Juan Rong, and Shi-Hua Li from Emory University.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health.

About the Burnham Institute for Medical Research
The Burnham Institute, founded in 1976, is an independent not-for-profit biomedical research institution dedicated to advancing the frontiers of scientific knowledge and providing the foundation for tomorrow's medical therapies. The Institute is home to three major centers: its original Cancer Center, the Del E. Webb Neuroscience and Aging Center established in 1999, and the Infectious and Inflammatory Disease Center dedicated in 2004. Since 1981, the Institute's Cancer Center has earned the prestigious designation as a Non-comprehensive Cancer Center by the National Cancer Institute. Discoveries by Burnham scientists have contributed to the development of new drugs for Alzheimer's disease, heart disease and several forms of cancer. Today the Burnham Institute employs more than 745, including 550 scientists. The majority of the Institute's funding derives from federal sources, but private philanthropic support is essential to continuing bold and innovative research. For additional information about the Institute and ways to support the research efforts of the Institute, visit www.burnham.org.



Breaking News


The Power of Two: For Anne and Charles Reinwald, overcoming cancer was just the beginning 

- - - -

The Power of Two Update - How Anne Became Healthy

- - - -

Supporting Statements from Medical Authorities


- - - 
-

Testimony of Dr. David Heber

- - - -

Cancer Cure Coalition Launches Major Initiatives

- - - 

Article Index

The Cancer Cure Coalition - 800 Village Square Crossing, Suite 222, Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410 - Tel. 561.207.6184
legal statement - webmaster - privacy policy
Copyright © 2004 Cancer Cure Coalition. All rights reserved.