Sim1 haploinsufficiency impairs melanocortin-mediated anorexia and activation of paraventricular nucleus neurons.
Kublaoui. Bassil M BM; Holder. J Lloyd JL; Gemelli. Terry T; Zinn. Andrew R AR
Key Findings
- Sim1‑deficient mice are hyperphagic despite higher hypothalamic POMC expression.
- MTII only weakly suppresses food intake in Sim1‑heterozygous mice but still boosts energy expenditure.
- MTII fails to activate PVN neurons in Sim1‑deficient mice, indicating SIM1 neurons mediate its anorectic action.
Practical Outcomes
- For most users MTII should still reduce appetite, but people with rare SIM1‑related genetic issues may see little effect. The findings don’t change dosing or protocol, but they highlight a genetic factor that could influence MTII’s effectiveness.
Summary
This study shows that a protein called SIM1 in the brain is needed for the appetite‑blocking effects of the peptide melanotan‑2 (MTII). Mice with only one working copy of the Sim1 gene still eat a lot, even though they have higher levels of the appetite‑reducing hormone POMC, and MTII doesn’t curb their eating as well as it does in normal mice. However, MTII still raises their energy use, so the drug’s effect on metabolism stays intact.
Abstract
Single-minded 1 (SIM1) is one of only six genes implicated in human monogenic obesity. Haploinsufficiency of this hypothalamic transcription factor is associated with hyperphagic obesity and increased linear growth in both humans and mice. Additionally, Sim1 heterozygous mice show enhanced hyperphagia and obesity in response to a high-fat diet. Thus the phenotype of Sim1 haploinsufficiency is similar to that of agouti yellow (Ay), and melanocortin 4 receptor (Mc4r) knockout mice, both of which are defective in hypothalamic melanocortin signaling. Sim1 and Mc4r are both expressed in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Here we report that Sim1 heterozygous mice, which have normal energy expenditure, are hyperphagic despite having elevated hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin (Pomc) expression. In response to the melanocortin agonist melanotan-2 (MTII) they exhibit a blunted suppression of feeding yet increase their energy expenditure normally. They also fail to activate PVN neurons in response to the drug at a dose that induces robust c-Fos expression in a subset of Sim1 PVN neurons in wild-type mice. The resistance to melanocortin signaling in Sim1 heterozygotes is not due to a reduced number of Sim1 neurons in the PVN. Hypothalamic Sim1 gene expression is induced by leptin and MTII treatment. Our results demonstrate that Sim1 heterozygotes are resistant to hypothalamic melanocortin signaling and suggest that Sim1-expressing PVN neurons regulate feeding, but not energy expenditure, in response to melanocortin signaling.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-05-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/me.2005-0483