Depleting Somatostatinergic Neurons Recapitulates Diabetic Phenotypes In Brain and Adipose Tissue

NIH RePORTER · NIH · F30 · $50,936 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary Type 2 diabetes (T2D) and metabolic syndrome (METS) are a major public health crisis affecting one in three Americans. Though many treatments exist for these diseases, none target brain inflammation. This gap is important because animal models show rapid induction of inflammation in metabolism regulating brain regions such as the hypothalamus, particularly upon saturated fat exposure. Hypothalamic inflammation is a key cause of chronic sympathetic nervous system (SNS) hyperactivity. The SNS regulates most tissues through norepinephrine, a catecholamine neurotransmitter which binds  and  adrenergic receptors (-AR). In T2D and METS, sympathetic nerves are hyperactive in many tissues, including white adipose tissue. In healthy adipose tissue, sympathetic nerves drive lipolysis: the release of free fatty acids, and the exogenous stimulation of this circuit clinically promotes glucose homeostasis. However, in the disease state, adipose tissue downregulates -AR and exhibits impaired lipolysis in response to SNS input (adipose catecholamine resistance). Chronically hyperactive sympathetic nerves could drive -AR downregulation, but no data directly show this at present, which hampers approaches to restoring endogenous catecholamine sensitivity and improving glucose homeostasis. In the present study, we ablate somatostatinergic (SST) neurons, an endogenous anti-inflammatory cellular population, in the paraventricular region of hypothalamus. This intervention induces both hypothalamic inflammation and visceral adipose catecholamine resistance, but no detailed studies of insulin/glucose homeostasis or sympathetic nerve activity have been performed in this model under chow or high fat diet feeding. Thus, our central hypothesis is that the ablation of hypothalamic SST neurons (SST-DTA) will exacerbate HFD induced visceral adipose catecholamine resistance and glucose intolerance by increasing hypothalamic inflammation and adipose sympathetic nerve activity. This hypothesis makes the prediction that SST-DTA drives adipose catecholamine resistance by increasing sympathetic nerve activity. Thus, our objective is to elucidate the consequences of ablating hypothalamic somatostatinergic neurons on adipose sympathetic nerve activity, adipose catecholamine resistance, and glucose homeostasis, under normal diet and HFD. This is in line with the mission of the NIDDK because it addresses important basic and translational aspects of the development of METS and T2D. As a result of the proposed studies, we expect to develop novel targets in the regulation of SNS activity which should prove useful in restoring adipose tissue sensitivity to catecholamines. Importantly, somatostatin analogues are already FDA approved and can target the hypothalamus, which suggests our data could support a drug repurposing approach to treating hypothalamic inflammation and restoring adipose tissue lipolytic function. Completion of this proposal will also contribute to my tr...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10849913
Project number
5F30DK131911-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM
Principal Investigator
Robert F Rosencrans
Activity code
F30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$50,936
Award type
5
Project period
2022-07-01 → 2025-06-30