Role of melanocortinergic neurons in feeding and the agouti obesity syndrome.
Fan. W W; Boston. B A BA; Kesterson. R A RA; Hruby. V J VJ; Cone. R D RD
Key Findings
- Agouti peptide blocks MC4‑R in the brain, causing overeating and obesity
- Melanotan‑II (MTII), a melanocortin agonist, strongly reduces feeding when given directly into the brain
- Blocking melanocortin receptors with SHU9119 reverses MTII’s effect and boosts eating
Practical Outcomes
- Melanocortin agonists like MTII could be powerful appetite‑suppressing agents, but they require direct brain delivery, limiting real‑world use. The findings highlight the melanocortin pathway as a target for weight‑control strategies, though safer, peripheral‑acting compounds are needed for practical biohacking.
Summary
The study shows that a brain‑acting version of the melanotan‑II peptide can sharply cut food intake in mice, while blocking the same pathway makes them eat more. This supports the idea that the brain’s melanocortin system normally keeps hunger in check, and that interfering with it (as the agouti gene does) leads to obesity.
Abstract
Dominant alleles at the agouti locus (A) cause an obesity syndrome in the mouse, as a consequence of ectopic expression of the agouti peptide. This peptide, normally only found in the skin, is a high-affinity antagonist of the melanocyte-stimulating hormone receptor (MC1-R), thus explaining the inhibitory effect of agouti on eumelanin pigment synthesis. The agouti peptide is also an antagonist of the hypothalamic melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4-R). To test the hypothesis that agouti causes obesity by antagonism of hypothalamic melanocortin receptors, we identified cyclic melanocortin analogues that are potent agonists or antagonists of the neural MC3 (refs 11, 12) and MC4 receptors. Intracerebroventricular administration of the agonist, MTII, inhibited feeding in four models of hyperphagia: fasted C57BL/6J, ob/ob, and A(Y) mice, and mice injected with neuropeptide Y. Co-administration of the specific melanocortin antagonist and agouti-mimetic SHU9119 completely blocked this inhibition. Furthermore, administration of SHU9119 significantly enhanced nocturnal feeding, or feeding stimulated by a prior fast. Our data show that melanocortinergic neurons exert a tonic inhibition of feeding behaviour. Chronic disruption of this inhibitory signal is a likely explanation of the agouti obesity syndrome.
Study Information
pubmed
1997
1997-01-09T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/385165a0