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Oxytocin

Pitocin, Syntocinon

Quick Stats
Studies 93
Trials 100
Score 2
2025 pubmed

Oxytocin neurons drive melanocortin circuit maturation via vesicle release during a neonatal critical period.

Barelle. Pierre-Yves PY; Schaller. Fabienne F; Park. Soyoung S; Caron. Emilie E; Klucznik. Jessica J; Ciofi. Phillipe P; Muscatelli. Françoise F; Bouret. Sebastien G SG

Key Findings

  • Oxytocin neurons are essential for proper development of POMC and AgRP melanocortin pathways during a neonatal critical period
  • Blocking oxytocin neuron activity or its receptor in the first post‑natal week disrupts circuit formation and causes lasting metabolic disturbances
  • Activating oxytocin neurons in newborn mice can rescue melanocortin circuit defects in a Prader‑Willi syndrome mouse model

Practical Outcomes

  • The study shows oxytocin’s role is mostly developmental, so it doesn’t suggest a direct supplement or protocol for adults. It hints that early‑life oxytocin signaling may influence lifelong metabolism, but there’s no actionable guidance for self‑experimentation in grown‑up humans. Caution is advised before considering oxytocin use for metabolic benefits.

Summary

In mice, oxytocin‑producing brain cells are needed during the first week after birth to help set up the brain circuits that control hunger and energy use. If these cells are blocked early, the wiring of those circuits is messed up, leading to long‑term metabolic problems. Giving oxytocin or activating its cells in newborn mice can fix some of these wiring issues, even in a disease model.

Abstract

The hypothalamus is crucial for regulating essential bodily functions, including energy balance. It is an exceedingly complex and heterogeneous brain region that contains a variety of neuronal systems that are interconnected with each other. Among these, the melanocortin system, which comprises pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and agouti-related peptide (AgRP) neurons, displays a remarkable anatomical relationship with oxytocin (OT) neurons in the paraventricular nucleus (PVH). Here, we demonstrate that OT neurons are instrumental in the development of the melanocortin system in mice. Chemogenetic inhibition of OT neurons during the first postnatal week selectively disrupts POMC and AgRP projections to the PVH, without affecting other target nuclei like the dorsomedial nucleus. This developmental role is age-dependent, as silencing OT neurons in juvenile or adult stages has no impact on melanocortin circuits. OT neurons release various neuropeptides and neurotransmitters, and their secretion can be modulated by chemogenetic manipulation. Expressing the botulinum toxin serotype B light chain in OT neurons reveals that their developmental actions rely on SNARE-mediated exocytosis. Moreover, administering an OT receptor antagonist during the first postnatal week leads to similar melanocortin circuit defects and long-term metabolic effects. Furthermore, neonatal chemogenetic activation of OT neurons rescues POMC circuit deficits in a mouse model of Prader-Willi Syndrome. These findings reveal that OT acts as a paracrine neurotrophic factor orchestrating the development of melanocortin circuits during a restricted neonatal critical period.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-11-12T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pbio.3003158

References

46