Elsevier

Molecular Metabolism

Volume 5, Issue 3, March 2016, Pages 245-252
Molecular Metabolism

Brief communication
Sex difference in physical activity, energy expenditure and obesity driven by a subpopulation of hypothalamic POMC neurons

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2016.01.005Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Generation of 5-HT2CRYFP mouse line revealed 40% of hypothalamic POMC neurons co-express 5-HT2CRs in male and female mice.

  • Pomc expressed exclusively within 5-HT2CR cells modulates energy intake and insulin sensitivity in male and female mice.

  • An unexpected sex difference in physical activity and energy expenditure is modulated by hypothalamic Pomc.

  • Pomc expressed exclusively within 5-HT2CR cells differentially impacts body weight accumulation in male and female mice.

Abstract

Objective

Obesity is one of the primary healthcare challenges of the 21st century. Signals relaying information regarding energy needs are integrated within the brain to influence body weight. Central among these integration nodes are the brain pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) peptides, perturbations of which disrupt energy balance and promote severe obesity. However, POMC neurons are neurochemically diverse and the crucial source of POMC peptides that regulate energy homeostasis and body weight remains to be fully clarified.

Methods

Given that a 5-hydroxytryptamine 2c receptor (5-HT2CR) agonist is a current obesity medication and 5-HT2CR agonist's effects on appetite are primarily mediated via POMC neurons, we hypothesized that a critical source of POMC regulating food intake and body weight is specifically synthesized in cells containing 5-HT2CRs. To exclusively manipulate Pomc synthesis only within 5-HT2CR containing cells, we generated a novel 5-HT2CRCRE mouse line and intercrossed it with Cre recombinase-dependent and hypothalamic specific reactivatable PomcNEO mice to restrict Pomc synthesis to the subset of hypothalamic cells containing 5-HT2CRs. This provided a means to clarify the specific contribution of a defined subgroup of POMC peptides in energy balance and body weight.

Results

Here we transform genetically programed obese and hyperinsulinemic male mice lacking hypothalamic Pomc with increased appetite, reduced physical activity and compromised brown adipose tissue (BAT) into lean, healthy mice via targeted restoration of Pomc function only within 5-HT2CR expressing cells. Remarkably, the same metabolic transformation does not occur in females, who despite corrected feeding behavior and normalized insulin levels remain physically inactive, have lower energy expenditure, compromised BAT and develop obesity.

Conclusions

These data provide support for the functional heterogeneity of hypothalamic POMC neurons, revealing that Pomc expression within 5-HT2CR expressing neurons is sufficient to regulate energy intake and insulin sensitivity in male and female mice. However, an unexpected sex difference in the function of this subset of POMC neurons was identified with regard to energy expenditure. We reveal that a large sex difference in physical activity, energy expenditure and the development of obesity is driven by this subpopulation, which constitutes approximately 40% of all POMC neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. This may have broad implications for strategies utilized to combat obesity, which at present largely ignore the sex of the obese individual.

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Keywords

Pro-opiomelanocortin (Pomc)
5-HT2c receptor
Obesity
Energy expenditure
Brown adipose tissue
Hyperinsulinemia
Sexual dimorphism
Hypothalamus

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Luke K. Burke and Barbora Doslikova contributed equally to this work.