Guest guest Posted July 11, 2004 Report Share Posted July 11, 2004 Of course we are all suspicious about the so called set point theory... I don't know if this resolves anything but what I really want to know it who how and why, " grrelin? " Hormone Wants To Keep Body At Weight Set Point http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/07/040707091615.htm/ Studies of a stomach hormone called ghrelin in normal weight women indicate that the hormone may play a part in reestablishing a body weight set-point after dieting and exercise, according to Penn State researchers. " Most studies have analyzed physical levels of ghrelin in obese or anorexic subjects, " says J. Leidy, who recently received her Ph.D. in physiology. " We looked at ghrelin in healthy, normal weight women. We are trying to see how the body maintains weight and maintains its energy balance. " Prior research showed that ghrelin levels rise when fasting and fall when the subject is fed. The levels rise 60 to 30 minutes before a normal meal time and 30 to 60 minutes after a meal, the level drops. According to Leidy, studies in human and rodents have found that injections of ghrelin significantly increase both hunger and food intake. The researchers, led by I. , associate professor of kinesiology, wanted to determine if ghrelin release was associated with body weight, physical exercise, reduced food intake or an overall energy deficit. " Changes in ghrelin appear to be most sensitive to changes in body weight created by an overall energy deficit, independent of specific effects of reduced food intake or physical exercise, " the researchers reported in a recent issue of the journal, Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. The researchers, who also included J.K. Gardner, research associate; B.R. Frye, graduate student; and M.L. Snook, M.K. Schuchert, and E.L. , undergraduate students, looked at healthy women without eating disorders, between the ages of 18 and 30, weighing between 105 and 160 pounds with 15 to 30 percent body fat. The women were non- smokers, not taking hormonal contraceptives and had no significant weight loss or gain in the past year. The study was part of a larger one designed to assess changes in reproductive function in response to controlled feeding and exercise. Participants had to agree to eat only food provided by the Penn State General Clinical Research Center at University Park and to eat two of their three meals at the facility. In the initial study, researchers studied all participants for about a month to establish a baseline; the subjects followed the controlled diet and exercise plans for three months. Researchers randomly assigned women to four groups, a control group that did no exercise and were given enough calories to maintain their weight, a group that exercised but were given enough calories to maintain their weight, and two groups that exercised but were given fewer calories than required to maintain their weight. One energy deficit group had a moderate energy deficit and the other had a high-energy deficit. For the ghrelin study, the four groups were compressed to three: the control group, the weight stable exerciser group and the weight loss exerciser group. Because the participants' diets were closely controlled, those that exhibited a weight loss, clearly experienced an energy deficit caused by exercise. The researchers measured body fat, fat mass and fat-free mass before the study, at the study midpoint and after the study. They also measured resting metabolic rate and maximal aerobic capacity. Blood samples to measure ghrelin level were done on 22 subjects and midpoint measurements on 17 subjects. " The disruption of body weight regulation seen in obesity makes one examine physiological factors in short and long term energy balance, " says Leidy. " This is the first study to show that weight loss resulting from a diet and exercise intervention leads to an increase in circulating ghrelin in normal weight, healthy young women. We found that ghrelin was significantly elevated with weight loss in exercising subjects. " The researchers found that changes in ghrelin came after changes in body weight, composition and resting metabolic rate. Previous research showed that ghrelin levels are low in obese subjects and high in anorexic subjects, however, in the study's normal women, no correlation between baseline ghrelin and body weight, body mass index, percent body fat, fat mass or fat-free mass was found. The researchers state that ghrelin levels reflect energy status and body composition only in subjects who have experienced significant alterations in energy status rather than the relatively stable energy and body composition status of the study's subjects. " The stimulatory effect on food intake attributed to ghrelin suggests a potential role for ghrelin in returning the body to a prior set- point for body weight after weight loss, " the Penn State researchers report. " The absence of changes in ghrelin in our weight stable group demonstrates that exercise training itself has little impact on at least one powerful modulator of food intake. " " The increase in ghrelin in the weight loss group was in response to the overall energy deficit created by the combination of reduced food intake and exercise, and not due to the endocrine and/or metabolic effects of physical exercise itself, " says Leidy. The National Institutes of Health supported this research. 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Guest guest Posted July 12, 2004 Report Share Posted July 12, 2004 Hi All, CR may involve use of the ghrelin receptor for determining the set point for regulating our appetite? See the pdf-available below. Holst B, Schwartz TW. Constitutive ghrelin receptor activity as a signaling set-point in appetite regulation. Trends Pharmacol Sci. 2004 Mar;25(3):113-7. Review. No abstract available. PMID: 15058279 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Ghrelin plays a key role as the major orexigenic hor-mone from the gastrointestinal tract to the hypothala-mic areas that govern food intake, balancing against a multitude of anorectic hormones, such as leptin, insulin and PYY3–36 . Surprisingly, even in the absence of ago-nist, the ghrelin receptor signals with ~50% activity. Thus, although ghrelin receptor antagonists are expected to reduce meal-associated food intake, inverse agonists of the ghrelin receptor, by blocking the consti-tutive receptor activity, might lower the set-point for hunger between meals, eliminating the craving for second orders, desserts and snacks. Long before the discovery of ghrelin, peptide and non-peptide compounds were synthesized and optimized as so-called growth hormone secretagogs [1]. In the mid-1990s the G-protein-coupled seven-transmembrane receptor through which these compounds acted was cloned [2], but the endogenous ligand for this receptor – ghrelin – was not identified until 1999 [3]. This 28 amino acid peptide is unusual because its biological activity depends on an n-octanylation at position Ser3 [3]. Surprisingly, the main site of production of ghrelin was found to be endocrine cells in the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract, and the major physiological role of ghrelin appears to be in the control of food intake and energy homeostasis [4].In humans, ghrelin infusion increases appetite and food intake both in normal subjects and in patients with decreased appetite, such as those suffering from cancer cachexia [5]. Ghrelin: the major orexigenic hormone that constitutes a pre-meal signal for food intake Rather abruptly, 20–30 min before a meal ghrelin is released from endocrine cells found mainly in the fundic mucosa of the stomach, although only when the upper GI tract is empty of calories [6,7]. The surge in plasma ghrelin levels drops shortly after food reaches the stomach [6,8]. Thus, `it is possible that in the conditioned animal, or human subject, the CNS in the expectation of an upcoming meal sends signals to " ask " whether the local conditions in the GI tract are appropriate for food intake' (Steve Woods). If food is not present in the upper GI tract, ghrelin is secreted to `tell' the hypothalamic centers that it is `OK' to start eating (i.e. ghrelin provides a sensation of hunger). Ghrelin stimulation balances against a multitude of inhibitory signals on the NPY/AGRP-containing neurons A major target for ghrelin is the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus. This nucleus harbors two populations of neurons with parallel projections but opposing effects on food intake and energy balance [9]. Both groups of neurons project heavily to the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, where their neurotransmitters are believed to exert their anorectic (appetite-suppressing) or orexigenic (appetite-stimulating) action [10]. The appetite-stimulating groups of neurons, which express the potent orexigenic neuropeptides neuropeptide Y (NPY) (stimulating NPY Y1 and Y5 receptors) and agouti-related protein (AGRP) (blocking melanocortin MC3 and MC4 receptors), appear to be the major target for ghrelin. These NPY/AGRP-containing neurons express ghrelin receptors [11] and respond to ghrelin by increasing their firing rate [12]. The anorectic pools of arcuate neurons express transmitters derived from proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and cocaine and amphetamine-regulated tran-script (CART) but do not possess ghrelin receptors [12]. Nevertheless, local projections from NPY/AGRP-containing neurons terminate on the POMC/CART-containing neurons and release GABA when activated by ghrelin; thus, these anorectic neurons are indirectly inhibited by ghrelin [12]. Both the NPY/AGRP- and the POMC/CART-containing neurons are targets for several inhibitory signals for food intake. Importantly, on a long-term basis, the hormones leptin and insulin act through their respective receptors on NPY/AGRP-containing neurons (and on POMC-contain-ing neurons) to inhibit food intake [10,13]. Additionally, the L-cell-derived hormone PYY3–36 [co-released with glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) from the lower GI tract following food intake] has been proposed to inhibit food intake by acting on presynaptic Y2 receptors [14]. Thus, on the NPY/AGRP-containing neurons the ghrelin receptor provides the only hormonal, appetite-stimulatory input that counterbalances a large number of inhibitory inputs [10] (Figure 1). Recently, using surgical and chemical vagotomy, a solid case was presented for the notion that afferent vagal neurons might be an alternative and important target for the stimulatory effect of ghrelin on food intake [15]. The appetite regulatory signals from the gut are conveyed to the hypothalamus through the afferent vagus and the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS)in thebrain stem[15].In fact,ghrelin receptors are also found in the dorsal vagal complex, making this another target for circulating ghrelin [15].Thus, although the major focus has been on the hypothalamic ghrelin receptor, several other sites that are important in appetite regulation could be involved in mediating ghrelin-induced food intake (Figure 1). Interestingly, it appears that the ghrelin receptor is coexpressed with the leptin receptor in these locations [15,16]. Does the high constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor provide a set-point for appetite regulation between meals? Figure 1. The possible dual hormonal and neuronal route for ghrelin as an orexigenic (appetite-stimulating) signal from the gastrointestinal (GI) tract to the hypothalamus. Ghrelin stimulates food intake, balancing against several inhibitory signals (e.g. insulin, leptin and PYY3–36) from the periphery to the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus. Ghrelin as a hormone can, in principle, increase food intake by either stimulating neuropeptide (NPY) and agouti-related protein (AGRP)-containing neurons in the arcuate nucleus or acting indirectly through the dorsal vagal complex in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) in the brain stem. Note the inhibitory pathway from NPY/AGRP-contain-ing neurons to proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and cocaine and amphetamine- regulated transcript (CART)-containing neurons, through which ghrelin receptor activity can indirectly inhibit the latter neurons. Ghrelin also acts by stimulating mainly gastric afferent vagal fibers [15], conceivably in a paracrine manner when released from the endocrine cells in the gut. Abbreviations: CCK, cholecystokinin; CRF, corticotropin-releasing factor; MCH, melanin-concentrating hormone; PVN, paraventricular nucleus. Does the high constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor provide a set-point for appetite regulation between meals? Recently, it was shown that the ghrelin receptor exhibits high constitutive activity. This receptor property remained inositol (1,4,5)-trisphosphate [ins(1,4,5)P3] turnover was measured instead it became clear that the ghrelin receptor in the absence of agonist signals with ,50% efficacy (Figure 2). As expected, ghrelin and various non-peptide growth hormone secretagogs also act as agonists in respect of increasing Ins(1,4,5)P3 turnover. Importantly, a highly modified substance P analog, [D-Arg1,D-Phe5, D-Trp7,9,Leu11]-substance P, known to be a low-potency blocker of agonist-stimulated signaling, was found to be a highly potent, full inverse agonist, decreasing the constitutive signaling of the ghrelin receptor down to that observed in mock transfected cells [17]. Although the primary transducer molecule is Gqa, the high constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor results in a robust ligand-independent activation of cAMP respon-sive element (CRE)-mediated gene transcription concei-vably conveyed through Ca 2 þ –calmodulin-dependent kinase IV-mediated phosphorylation of CRE-binding pro-tein (CREB) [18] (Figure 2). Importantly, control of CREB activity was recently shown in vivo to be a major signal transduction pathway for leptin in NPY/AGRP-containing neurons of the hypothalamus [19]. Thus, this represents part of a common signaling pathway for the physiologically opposing actions of ghrelin and leptin (Figure 2). As described above, ghrelin appears to counterbalance several inhibitory inputs at its various sites of action (Figures 1,3). Although the constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor remains to be shown in an in vivo setting, the high constitutive signaling of the ghrelin receptor could provide a set-point of signal transduction activity against which all the inhibitory receptors act. For example, a decrease in leptin levels is an important signal for increased food intake and decreased energy expendi-ture. This leptin signal could be mediated through a decreased downstream inhibition of the constitutive signaling of the ghrelin receptor, causing an increase in food intake (Figures 2,3). Obesity: ghrelin receptor antagonists before meals and inverse agonists between meals? It has become increasingly clear that ghrelin receptor antagonists could be highly interesting anti-obesity drugs as blockers of the orexigenic signal from the GI tract to the brain [7]. Importantly, however, the hormonal ghrelin signal occurs only just before and at the start of a meal. Nevertheless, it is well known that many people feel enough `hunger' to nibble between meals, despite the fact that ghrelin levels have returned to pre-meal levels at this point (Figure 3). If the constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor, as suggested, provides a signaling set-point in the stimulatory branch for food intake between meals, then inverse agonists for the ghrelin receptor might reduce `between-meals' food intake. The rationale behind this is that blocking the constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor should increase sensitivity to inhibitory signals such as leptin, insulin and PYY3–36, and thereby eliminate unnoticed for many years because mobilization of intra-cellular Ca 2 þ had been used almost exclusively to monitor the signal transduction activity of the receptor [17]. When the craving for second meals, desserts and snacks (Figure 3). Interestingly, as illustrated by the substance P analog, it is possible to develop selective inverse agonists with high potency as inverse agonists but with a much lower potency as antagonists (Figure 2). It could be hypothesized that a selective inverse agonist would be the correct remedy to sustain a weight loss because at the correct dose the drug would decrease the constitutive activity of the ghrelin receptor between meals but would still allow for appropriate food intake during meals. This hypothesis can only be tested by an in vivo trial of a selective inverse agonist for the ghrelin receptor, prefer-entially a non-peptide compound having a better `thera-peutic window' than the substance P analog, which at higher doses has unspecific effects on other receptors. Unfortunately, however, all publicly available non-peptide compounds are either agonists or neutral antagonists [17]. Figure 2. High constitutive signaling by the ghrelin receptor through the Gqa pathway, including activation of cAMP response element (CRE)-mediated gene transcription. (a) Inositol (1,4,5)-trisphosphate [ins(1,4,5)P3] turnover in response to the application of the endogenous agonist ghrelin, the non-peptide growth hormone (GH) secretagog MK677 (see Chemical names) and the full inverse agonist [D-Arg1,D- Phe5,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]-substance P (SP) is shown in COS cells transfected with the ghrelin receptor. Note that the SP analog displays higher potency as an inverse agonist compared with as an antagonist. ( CRE-luciferase activity is shown in a gene-dosing experiment with the ghrelin receptor in HEK-293 cells. © A highly simplified signal transduction scheme demonstrating the convergence of the stimulatory ghrelin signal and the inhibitory leptin signal on CRE-binding protein (CREB) is shown (curves are redrawn from [17]). – Regulation of ghrelin receptor _expression provides a direct control of signaling activity The fact that the ghrelin receptor signals with very high activity independently of the agonist implies that control of the _expression level of the receptor is directly correlated to signaling activity (Figure 2b). During prolonged fasting an eightfold increase in the _expression of the ghrelin receptor in the hypothalamus was described recently [20]. This would be expected to result in a ghrelin-independent increase in receptor signaling and thereby an appropriate general increase in appetite and decrease in energy expenditure. Moreover, polymorphisms that result in altered _expression of the receptor protein should directly result in an altered signaling and thereby altered regulation of appetite, independently of the ghrelin ligand. For example, single nucleotide polymorphisms that lead to increased ghrelin receptor _expression should be expected to be associated with obesity. Figure 3. Inverse agonists for the ghrelin receptor as anti- obesity drugs? Plasma levels of ghrelin increase 20–30 min before meal (pre-meal surge) [6]. Thus, in obesity, ghrelin receptor antagonists could be used to block this ghrelin `stimulus' and thereby reduce meal size [17]. By contrast, inverse agonists for the ghrelin receptor that specifically target its constitutive activity might be efficient drugs to lower the signaling set-point between meals and thereby increase sensitivity to the multiple inhibitory signals (e.g. leptin, insulin and PYY3–36) and consequently eliminate snack-eating behavior. Abbreviations: AGRP, agouti-related protein; B, breakfast; L, lunch; MC4, mela-nocortin receptor type 4; NPY, neuropeptide Y; Y1, NPY receptor type 1. Chemical names MK677: N-[1®{[1,2-dihydro-1-methanesulfonylspiro-(3H- indole-3,4'-yl]carbonyl}-2-(phenylmethoxy)- ethyl]-2-amino-2-methylpropanamide methanesulfonate References 1 Bowers, C.Y. et al. (1980) Structure-activity relationships of a synthetic pentapeptide that specifically releases growth hormone in vitro. Endocrinology 106, 663–667 2 , A.D. et al. (1996) A receptor in pituitary and hypothalamus that functions in growth hormone release. Science 273, 974–977 3 Kojima, M. et al. (1999) Ghrelin is a growth-hormone-releasing acylated peptide from stomach. Nature 402, 656–660 4 Kojima, M. et al. (2001) Ghrelin: discovery of the natural endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue receptor. Trends Endocrinol. Metab. 12, 118–122 5 Wren, A.M. et al. (2001) Ghrelin enhances appetite and increases food intake in humans. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 86, 5992 6 Cummings, D.E. et al. (2001) A preprandial rise in plasma ghrelin levels suggests a role in meal initiation in humans. Diabetes 50, 1714–1719 7 Cummings, D.E. et al. (2002) Plasma ghrelin levels after diet- induced weight loss or gastric bypass surgery. New Engl. J. Med. 346, 1623–1630 8 Drazen, D.L. et al. (2003) Peripheral signals in the control of satiety and hunger. Curr. Opin. Clin. Nutr. Metab. Care 6, 621–629 9 Tschop, M. et al. (2000) Ghrelin induces adiposity in rodents. Nature 407, 908–913 10 Schwartz, M.W. et al. (2000) Central nervous system control of food intake. Nature 404, 661–671 11 Willesen, M.G. et al. (1999) Co-localization of growth hormone secretagogue receptor and NPY mRNA in the arcuate nucleus of the rat. Neuroendocrinology 70, 306–316 12 Cowley, M.A. et al. (2003) The distribution and mechanism of action of ghrelin in the CNS demonstrates a novel hypothalamic circuit regulating energy homeostasis. Neuron 37, 649–661 13 Crowley, V.E. et al. (2002) Obesity therapy: altering the energy intake-and-expenditure balance sheet. Nat. Rev. Drug Discov. 1, 276–286 14 Batterham, R.L. et al. (2002) Gut hormone PYY(3–36) physiologically inhibits food intake. Nature 418, 650–654 15 Date, Y. et al. (2002) The role of the gastric afferent vagal nerve in ghrelin-induced feeding and growth hormone secretion in rats. Gastroenterology 123, 1120–1128 16 Cummings, D.E. et al. (2003) Ghrelin–leptin tango in body-weight regulation. Gastroenterology 124, 1532–1535 17 Holst, B. et al. (2003) High constitutive signaling of the ghrelin receptor-identification of a potent inverse agonist. Mol. Endocrinol. 17, 2201–2210 18 s, R.P. et al. (1994) Calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase types II and IV differentially regulate CREB-dependent gene _expression. Mol. Cell. Biol. 14, 6107–6116 19 Shimizu-Albergine, M. et al. (2001) Downregulation of fasting- induced cAMP response element-mediated gene induction by leptin in neuropeptide Y neurons of the arcuate nucleus. J. Neurosci. 21, 1238–1246 20 Kim, M.S. et al. (2003) Changes in ghrelin and ghrelin receptor _expression according to feeding status. NeuroReport 14, 1317–1320 Cheers, Alan Pater > Of course we are all suspicious about the so called set point > theory... I don't know if this resolves anything but what I really > want to know it who how and why, " grrelin? " > > Hormone Wants To Keep Body At Weight Set Point > > http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/07/040707091615.htm/ > > Studies of a stomach hormone called ghrelin in normal weight women > indicate that the hormone may play a part in reestablishing a body > weight set-point after dieting and exercise, according to Penn State > researchers. > " Most studies have analyzed physical levels of ghrelin in obese > or > anorexic subjects, " says J. Leidy, who recently received her > Ph.D. in physiology. " We looked at ghrelin in healthy, normal weight > women. We are trying to see how the body maintains weight and > maintains its energy balance. " > Prior research showed that ghrelin levels rise when fasting and fall > when the subject is fed. The levels rise 60 to 30 minutes before a > normal meal time and 30 to 60 minutes after a meal, the level drops. > According to Leidy, studies in human and rodents have found that > injections of ghrelin significantly increase both hunger and food > intake. > The researchers, led by I. , associate professor of > kinesiology, wanted to determine if ghrelin release was associated > with body weight, physical exercise, reduced food intake or an > overall energy deficit. > " Changes in ghrelin appear to be most sensitive to changes in body > weight created by an overall energy deficit, independent of specific > effects of reduced food intake or physical exercise, " the researchers > reported in a recent issue of the journal, Clinical Endocrinology & > Metabolism. > The researchers, who also included J.K. Gardner, research associate; > B.R. Frye, graduate student; and M.L. Snook, M.K. Schuchert, and E.L. > , undergraduate students, looked at healthy women without > eating disorders, between the ages of 18 and 30, weighing between 105 > and 160 pounds with 15 to 30 percent body fat. The women were non- > smokers, not taking hormonal contraceptives and had no significant > weight loss or gain in the past year. The study was part of a larger > one designed to assess changes in reproductive function in response > to controlled feeding and exercise. > Participants had to agree to eat only food provided by the Penn State > General Clinical Research Center at University Park and to eat two of > their three meals at the facility. In the initial study, researchers > studied all participants for about a month to establish a baseline; > the subjects followed the controlled diet and exercise plans for > three months. Researchers randomly assigned women to four groups, a > control group that did no exercise and were given enough calories to > maintain their weight, a group that exercised but were given enough > calories to maintain their weight, and two groups that exercised but > were given fewer calories than required to maintain their weight. One > energy deficit group had a moderate energy deficit and the other had > a high-energy deficit. > For the ghrelin study, the four groups were compressed to three: the > control group, the weight stable exerciser group and the weight loss > exerciser group. Because the participants' diets were closely > controlled, those that exhibited a weight loss, clearly experienced > an energy deficit caused by exercise. > The researchers measured body fat, fat mass and fat-free mass before > the study, at the study midpoint and after the study. They also > measured resting metabolic rate and maximal aerobic capacity. Blood > samples to measure ghrelin level were done on 22 subjects and > midpoint measurements on 17 subjects. > " The disruption of body weight regulation seen in obesity makes one > examine physiological factors in short and long term energy balance, " > says Leidy. " This is the first study to show that weight loss > resulting from a diet and exercise intervention leads to an increase > in circulating ghrelin in normal weight, healthy young women. We > found that ghrelin was significantly elevated with weight loss in > exercising subjects. " > The researchers found that changes in ghrelin came after changes in > body weight, composition and resting metabolic rate. Previous > research showed that ghrelin levels are low in obese subjects and > high in anorexic subjects, however, in the study's normal women, no > correlation between baseline ghrelin and body weight, body mass > index, percent body fat, fat mass or fat-free mass was found. The > researchers state that ghrelin levels reflect energy status and body > composition only in subjects who have experienced significant > alterations in energy status rather than the relatively stable energy > and body composition status of the study's subjects. > " The stimulatory effect on food intake attributed to ghrelin suggests > a potential role for ghrelin in returning the body to a prior set- > point for body weight after weight loss, " the Penn State researchers > report. " The absence of changes in ghrelin in our weight stable group > demonstrates that exercise training itself has little impact on at > least one powerful modulator of food intake. " > " The increase in ghrelin in the weight loss group was in response to > the overall energy deficit created by the combination of reduced food > intake and exercise, and not due to the endocrine and/or metabolic > effects of physical exercise itself, " says Leidy. > The National Institutes of Health supported this research. 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