The potential role of the novel hypothalamic neuropeptides nesfatin-1, phoenixin, spexin and kisspeptin in the pathogenesis of anxiety and anorexia nervosa.
Pałasz. Artur A; Janas-Kozik. Małgorzata M; Borrow. Amanda A; Arias-Carrión. Oscar O; Worthington. John J JJ
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin, along with nesfatin-1, phoenixin, and spexin, appears to modulate stress and food‑intake pathways in the brain.
- Patients with anxiety or anorexia nervosa show sex‑related changes in plasma levels of these neuropeptides.
- Targeting these peptides could become a future strategy for treating certain neuropsychiatric and metabolic conditions.
Practical Outcomes
- At present there are no specific dosing guidelines or protocols for using kisspeptin to improve anxiety or eating behavior. The main takeaway for biohackers is to watch this area for future developments, as it may eventually lead to novel supplements or drugs that influence mood and appetite regulation.
Summary
The paper reviews early research showing that kisspeptin and a few other brain peptides might influence anxiety and eating disorders like anorexia. It notes that these peptides can affect stress responses and how much we eat, and that their blood levels differ between men and women in people with anxiety or anorexia. However, the work is still mostly basic science and does not give concrete ways to use kisspeptin right now.
Abstract
Due to the dynamic development of molecular neurobiology and bioinformatic methods several novel brain neuropeptides have been identified and characterized in recent years. Contemporary techniques of selective molecular detection e.g. in situ Real-Time PCR, microdiffusion and some bioinformatics strategies that base on searching for single structural features common to diverse neuropeptides such as hidden Markov model (HMM) have been successfully introduced. A convincing majority of neuropeptides have unique properties as well as a broad spectrum of physiological activity in numerous neuronal pathways including the hypothalamus and limbic system. The newly discovered but uncharacterized regulatory factors nesfatin-1, phoenixin, spexin and kisspeptin have the potential to be unique modulators of stress responses and eating behaviour. Accumulating basic studies revelaed an intriguing role of these neuropeptides in the brain pathways involved in the pathogenesis of anxiety behaviour. Nesfatin-1, phoenixin, spexin and kisspeptin may also distinctly affect the energy homeostasis and modulate food intake not only at the level of hypothalamic centres. Moreover, in patients suffered from anxiety and anorexia nervosa a significant, sex-related changes in the plasma neuropeptide levels occurred. It should be therefore taken into account that the targeted pharmacomodulation of central peptidergic signaling may be potentially helpful in the future treatment of certain neuropsychiatric and metabolic disorders. This article reviews recent evidence dealing with the hypothetical role of these new factors in the anxiety-related circuits and pathophysiology of anorexia nervosa.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-12-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.neuint.2017.12.006
58
212