Obesity dysregulates feeding-evoked response dynamics in hypothalamic satiety neurons

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Abstract

Melanocortin-4 receptor-expressing neurons in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH MC4R ) integrate hunger-promoting and hunger-suppressing signals to regulate satiety. Food consumption-evoked responses in PVH MC4R neurons increase gradually during meal consumption to promote satiety, and disrupting this process drives massive obesity. These critical satiety neurons are strongly affected by a high-fat diet, yet the impact on their functional properties remains unknown. We used fiber photometry to track PVH MC4R neurons’ responses to the consumption of drops of milkshake in animals fed a chow diet or a high-fat diet (HFD), both after obesity was established and after its reversal. PVH MC4R neurons in HFD-fed animals showed greater consumption-evoked responses than chow-fed animals at the early stages of meal consumption, and these responses did not increase further during the meal. HFD-fed animals also showed reduced licking vigor and motivation to consume Ensure. Switching HFD-fed obese animals to a normal chow diet (NCD) re-engaged the motivation to consume Ensure, partially restoring early-meal neural responses to a lower level, but did not restore the increase in consumption-evoked response magnitude across the meal. These findings highlight functional alterations in hypothalamic satiety-promoting neurons in obesity and provide insight into the pathological neural consequences of an obesogenic environment.

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