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Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats

Hypothalamus is the highest center and the main crossroad of numerous homeostatic regulatory pathways including reproduction and energy metabolism. Previous reports indicate that some of these functions may be driven by the synchronized but distinct functioning of the left and right hypothalamic sid...

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Autores principales: Toth, Istvan, Kiss, David S., Jocsak, Gergely, Somogyi, Virag, Toronyi, Eva, Bartha, Tibor, Frenyo, Laszlo V., Horvath, Tamas L., Zsarnovszky, Attila
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4560379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26339901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137462
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author Toth, Istvan
Kiss, David S.
Jocsak, Gergely
Somogyi, Virag
Toronyi, Eva
Bartha, Tibor
Frenyo, Laszlo V.
Horvath, Tamas L.
Zsarnovszky, Attila
author_facet Toth, Istvan
Kiss, David S.
Jocsak, Gergely
Somogyi, Virag
Toronyi, Eva
Bartha, Tibor
Frenyo, Laszlo V.
Horvath, Tamas L.
Zsarnovszky, Attila
author_sort Toth, Istvan
collection PubMed
description Hypothalamus is the highest center and the main crossroad of numerous homeostatic regulatory pathways including reproduction and energy metabolism. Previous reports indicate that some of these functions may be driven by the synchronized but distinct functioning of the left and right hypothalamic sides. However, the nature of interplay between the hemispheres with regard to distinct hypothalamic functions is still unclear. Here we investigated the metabolic asymmetry between the left and right hypothalamic sides of ovariectomized female rats by measuring mitochondrial respiration rates, a parameter that reflects the intensity of cell and tissue metabolism. Ovariectomized (saline injected) and ovariectomized+estrogen injected animals were fed ad libitum or fasted to determine 1) the contribution of estrogen to metabolic asymmetry of hypothalamus; and 2) whether the hypothalamic asymmetry is modulated by the satiety state. Results show that estrogen-priming significantly increased both the proportion of animals with detected hypothalamic lateralization and the degree of metabolic difference between the hypothalamic sides causing a right-sided dominance during state 3 mitochondrial respiration (St3) in ad libitum fed animals. After 24 hours of fasting, lateralization in St3 values was clearly maintained; however, instead of the observed right-sided dominance that was detected in ad libitum fed animals here appeared in form of either right- or left-sidedness. In conclusion, our results revealed estrogen- and satiety state-dependent metabolic differences between the two hypothalamic hemispheres in female rats showing that the hypothalamic hemispheres drive the reproductive and satiety state related functions in an asymmetric manner.
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spelling pubmed-45603792015-09-10 Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats Toth, Istvan Kiss, David S. Jocsak, Gergely Somogyi, Virag Toronyi, Eva Bartha, Tibor Frenyo, Laszlo V. Horvath, Tamas L. Zsarnovszky, Attila PLoS One Research Article Hypothalamus is the highest center and the main crossroad of numerous homeostatic regulatory pathways including reproduction and energy metabolism. Previous reports indicate that some of these functions may be driven by the synchronized but distinct functioning of the left and right hypothalamic sides. However, the nature of interplay between the hemispheres with regard to distinct hypothalamic functions is still unclear. Here we investigated the metabolic asymmetry between the left and right hypothalamic sides of ovariectomized female rats by measuring mitochondrial respiration rates, a parameter that reflects the intensity of cell and tissue metabolism. Ovariectomized (saline injected) and ovariectomized+estrogen injected animals were fed ad libitum or fasted to determine 1) the contribution of estrogen to metabolic asymmetry of hypothalamus; and 2) whether the hypothalamic asymmetry is modulated by the satiety state. Results show that estrogen-priming significantly increased both the proportion of animals with detected hypothalamic lateralization and the degree of metabolic difference between the hypothalamic sides causing a right-sided dominance during state 3 mitochondrial respiration (St3) in ad libitum fed animals. After 24 hours of fasting, lateralization in St3 values was clearly maintained; however, instead of the observed right-sided dominance that was detected in ad libitum fed animals here appeared in form of either right- or left-sidedness. In conclusion, our results revealed estrogen- and satiety state-dependent metabolic differences between the two hypothalamic hemispheres in female rats showing that the hypothalamic hemispheres drive the reproductive and satiety state related functions in an asymmetric manner. Public Library of Science 2015-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4560379/ /pubmed/26339901 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137462 Text en © 2015 Toth et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Toth, Istvan
Kiss, David S.
Jocsak, Gergely
Somogyi, Virag
Toronyi, Eva
Bartha, Tibor
Frenyo, Laszlo V.
Horvath, Tamas L.
Zsarnovszky, Attila
Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats
title Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats
title_full Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats
title_fullStr Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats
title_full_unstemmed Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats
title_short Estrogen- and Satiety State-Dependent Metabolic Lateralization in the Hypothalamus of Female Rats
title_sort estrogen- and satiety state-dependent metabolic lateralization in the hypothalamus of female rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4560379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26339901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137462
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