Cell
Volume 160, Issue 5, 26 February 2015, Pages 829-841
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Article
Sensory Detection of Food Rapidly Modulates Arcuate Feeding Circuits

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2015.01.033Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Sensory detection of food rapidly inhibits AgRP and activates POMC neurons

  • Rapid sensory feedback occurs before any food is consumed

  • The magnitude of neuronal response depends on food palatability and nutritional state

  • AgRP/POMC neurons may play a primary role in driving food discovery

Summary

Hunger is controlled by specialized neural circuits that translate homeostatic needs into motivated behaviors. These circuits are under chronic control by circulating signals of nutritional state, but their rapid dynamics on the timescale of behavior remain unknown. Here, we report optical recording of the natural activity of two key cell types that control food intake, AgRP and POMC neurons, in awake behaving mice. We find unexpectedly that the sensory detection of food is sufficient to rapidly reverse the activation state of these neurons induced by energy deficit. This rapid regulation is cell-type specific, modulated by food palatability and nutritional state, and occurs before any food is consumed. These data reveal that AgRP and POMC neurons receive real-time information about the availability of food in the external world, suggesting a primary role for these neurons in controlling appetitive behaviors such as foraging that promote the discovery of food.

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