Agouti-related protein prevents self-starvation

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Abstract

Food restriction leads to a paradoxical increase in physical activity and further suppression of food intake, such as observed in anorexia nervosa. To understand this pathophysiological process, we induced physical hyperactivity and self-starvation in rats by restricting food in the presence of running wheels. Normally, decreased melanocortin receptor activity will prevent starvation. However, we found that self-starvation increased melanocortin receptors in the ventral medial hypothalamus, a brain region involved in eating behavior. Suppression of melanocortin receptor activity, via central infusion of Agouti-related protein (AgRP), increased survival rate in these rats by counteracting physical hyperactivity, food intake suppression as well as deregulated body temperature. We conclude that self-starvation may result from insufficient suppression of central melanocortin receptor activity.

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Kas, M. J. H., Van Dijk, G., Scheurink, A. J. W., & Adan, R. A. H. (2003). Agouti-related protein prevents self-starvation. Molecular Psychiatry, 8(2), 235–240. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.mp.4001206

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