Title: ENERGY BALANCE
1ENERGY BALANCE
Page 469-488
2- Dynamic relationship between energy acquisition
and expenditure - Energy stored in adipose tissue
3Energy Utilization and Storage
- Postprandial Phase metabolic fuels (sugars,
fatty acids, and amino acids) enter bloodstream - Postabsorptive Phase lowers level of metabolic
fuels in blood --gt stores excess energy
4Insulin Promotes Energy Storage
- pancreatic ? cells release
- glucose --gt glycogen (liver)
- glucose transport into muscle and fat cells
- necessary for glucose oxidation and lipogenesis
(store fat) - prevents both glycogen breakdown and mobilization
of fat - only energy storage hormone in vertebrates
5Insulin Release
- Cephalic Phase due to sensory stimuli during
food intake - may increase hunger
- Gastrointestinal Phase due to absorption of
nutrients from the gut
6Diabetes Mellitus
- insufficient insulin secretion
- surplus energy not stored into fat (5 vs normal
30-40) - ? glucose in blood (high blood sugar, sweet
urine) - Brain function normal
- Other tissues starving --gt results in enormous
food intake (hyperphagic) - High-fat diet stops hyperphagia
7Hyperinsulinemia
- excess insulin secretion
- Low blood sugar --gt mental confusion, dizziness,
weakness, and hunger - Obesity - constantly feel hungry and eat
8Energy Mobilization
- Glucagon from pancreatic ?-cells induces
- Lipolysis - breakdown of adipose tissues
- Glycogenolysis - breakdown of stored glycogen
(liver) - Sympathetic Nervous System
- innervates fat cells --gt lipolysis
- innervates liver --gt glycogenolysis
- Gluconeogenesis amino acids in liver produced
into glucose and ketone bodies
9Long-term Food Deprivation
- Glycogenolysis
- Lipolysis
- Gluconeogenesis
- Other methods?
- Growth hormone --gt lipolysis
- Exercise--gt corticosterone or cortisol--gt
gluconeogenesis - Stress--gt epinephrine--gt glycogenolysis
10Dual-Center Model
- Lateral hypothalamus - Hunger Center
- Lesions --gt loss of appetite and lack of eating
behavior - VMH - Satiety Center
- Lesions --gt enormous food intake and rapid weight
gain
11Data Dual-center model
- LH lesions interfere with all motivated behavior
- Lesion anywhere along the DA tracts that pass
through the LH - --gt similar behavioral deficits as LH
lesion - VMH may just be a part of regulatory feeding
circuit via the autonomic (sympathetic and
parasympathetic) nervous system
12Current Model Metabolic Hypothesis
- Metabolic fuels (glucose, fatty acids, ketone
bodies) make usable energy for cellular processes - Feeding is responsive to changes in metabolic
signals - Animals with isolated hypothalamus display
feeding behavior when oxidation of metabolic
fuels is blocked
13Blowfly Negative Feedback Loop for Satiety
- Neural signals from stomach distention
- Rate of gastric emptying
14Insulin and Feeding Behavior
- Release associated with meal termination
- Destruction of the ? cells induces long-term
hyperphagia - Not a direct effect on satiety, rather may
- Facilitates the use, storage, and mobilization of
carbohydrates - Feedback with other hormones or the autonomic
nervous system - Signals CNS about peripheral levels of metabolic
fuels via cerebrospinal fluid
15The Liver in Insulin-Induced Feeding
- Inject insulin--gt ? blood glucose--gt ? feeding
- Add ketone bodies (used by brain)
- No difference
- Add fructose (used by liver)
- ? feeding
- Suggests the liver is important in mediating
insulin-induced feeding
16Cholecystokinin (CCK)
- Aids digestion during feeding
- ? food intake
- Binds to peripheral receptors that signal the
brain, via vagus nerve, to stop eating - Transection of the vagus blocks CCK effects on
eating - CCK levels during meal in blood -- slightly
reduced with digestion around vagus -- varies
during course of meal - Suggests local release of CCK mediates satiety
via the vagus nerve
17Controversial Effects of CCK on Feeding
- CCK antagonist
- Aversive or toxic effects?
- Learned-aversion paradigm (conditioning) CCK
paired with saccharin
18Leptin
- Secreted by adipose
- Indicator of body fat content?
19Leptin
- ob/ob mice do not produce leptin
- Leptin injections ? food intake and body weight
- db/db mice produce normal amount of leptin but no
leptin receptors - Leptin injections have no effect
- Humans??
20Ovarian Hormones Rats
- OVX increases food intake and body mass (20-25)
- ? fat deposition
- ? locomotor activity
- Species specific
- Inject E --gt mild, transient hypophagia, ?
activity, and ? body weight - P has no effect without E
- Inject E P --gt still fat
- Intact females injected with P --gt weight gain
P blocks the effects of E on food intake,
adiposity, locomotor activity, and body mass
21Eating and Body Weight During the Estrus Cycle
- Rats
- ? immediately after proestrus (high E)
- ? during diestrus (low E)
- ? during both pregnancy and pseudopregnancy (high
P) - Golden hamsters
- ? body mass when days are short (low E) -
non-breeding season
22Ovarian Hormones Primates
- Non-human primates -- ? food intake during luteal
phase (high P) - OVX rhesus monkeys -- mimic hormonal cycle by
injecting with E P --gt cyclic changes in food
intake - Women -- ? food intake during 10 days prior to
menstruation than during 10 days after the onset
of menstrual bleeding
23Ovarian Hormones Possible Methods of Action
1. May affect brain sites that control food
intake and activity -- E implants into VMH of
ovx rats 2. May affect body mass independent
from food intake and behavior -- OVX vs intact
24Androgens
- Males --gt larger and eat more
- Androgens -- ? body mass energy consumption
- Rats
- Castration --gt ? food intake weight gain
- T replacement reverses
- Actions both centrally (CNS-induced) and
peripherally (muscle mass)