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The short-chain fatty acid acetate reduces appetite via a central homeostatic mechanism

Authors :
Frost, Gary
Sleeth, Michelle L.
Sahuri-Arisoylu, Meliz
Lizarbe, Blanca
Cerdan, Sebastian
Brody, Leigh
Anastasovska, Jelena
Ghourab, Samar
Hankir, Mohammed
Zhang, Shuai
Carling, David
Swann, Jonathan R.
Gibson, Glenn
Viardot, Alexander
Morrison, Douglas
Thomas, E. Louise
Bell, Jimmy D.
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
Source :
Nature Communications; Vol 5
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Increased intake of dietary carbohydrate that is fermented in the colon by the microbiota has been reported to decrease body weight, although the mechanism remains unclear. Here we use in vivo(11)C-acetate and PET-CT scanning to show that colonic acetate crosses the blood-brain barrier and is taken up by the brain. Intraperitoneal acetate results in appetite suppression and hypothalamic neuronal activation patterning. We also show that acetate administration is associated with activation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and changes in the expression profiles of regulatory neuropeptides that favour appetite suppression. Furthermore, we demonstrate through (13)C high-resolution magic-angle-spinning that (13)C acetate from fermentation of (13)C-labelled carbohydrate in the colon increases hypothalamic (13)C acetate above baseline levels. Hypothalamic (13)C acetate regionally increases the (13)C labelling of the glutamate-glutamine and GABA neuroglial cycles, with hypothalamic (13)C lactate reaching higher levels than the 'remaining brain'. These observations suggest that acetate has a direct role in central appetite regulation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications; Vol 5
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..37e64d7101673d005db5a164d7bad700