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Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions

OBJECTIVE: Acyl-ghrelin regulates eating, body weight, blood glucose, and GH secretion upon binding to its receptor GHSR (growth hormone secretagogue receptor; ghrelin receptor). GHSR is distributed in several brain regions and some peripheral cell-types including pituitary somatotrophs. The objecti...

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Autores principales: Gupta, Deepali, Patterson, Anna M., Osborne-Lawrence, Sherri, Bookout, Angie L., Varshney, Salil, Shankar, Kripa, Singh, Omprakash, Metzger, Nathan P., Richard, Corine P., Wyler, Steven C., Elmquist, Joel K., Zigman, Jeffrey M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8203846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34023483
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101258
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author Gupta, Deepali
Patterson, Anna M.
Osborne-Lawrence, Sherri
Bookout, Angie L.
Varshney, Salil
Shankar, Kripa
Singh, Omprakash
Metzger, Nathan P.
Richard, Corine P.
Wyler, Steven C.
Elmquist, Joel K.
Zigman, Jeffrey M.
author_facet Gupta, Deepali
Patterson, Anna M.
Osborne-Lawrence, Sherri
Bookout, Angie L.
Varshney, Salil
Shankar, Kripa
Singh, Omprakash
Metzger, Nathan P.
Richard, Corine P.
Wyler, Steven C.
Elmquist, Joel K.
Zigman, Jeffrey M.
author_sort Gupta, Deepali
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Acyl-ghrelin regulates eating, body weight, blood glucose, and GH secretion upon binding to its receptor GHSR (growth hormone secretagogue receptor; ghrelin receptor). GHSR is distributed in several brain regions and some peripheral cell-types including pituitary somatotrophs. The objective of the current study was to determine the functional significance of acyl-ghrelin's action on GHSR-expressing somatotrophs in mediating GH secretion and several of acyl-ghrelin's metabolic actions. METHODS: GH-IRES-Cre mice and loxP-flanked (floxed) GHSR mice were newly developed and then crossed to one another to generate mice that lacked GHSR selectively from somatotrophs. Following validation of mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, metabolic responses of these mice and control littermates were assessed following both acute and chronic acyl-ghrelin administration, a 24-h fast, and a prolonged 60% chronic caloric restriction protocol modeling starvation. RESULTS: In mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, a single peripheral injection of acyl-ghrelin failed to induce GH secretion or increase food intake, unlike wild-type and other littermate control groups. However, the usual acute blood glucose increase in response to the acyl-ghrelin bolus was preserved. Similarly, chronic s.c. acyl-ghrelin administration to mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion failed to increase plasma GH, food intake, or body weight. Physiologically elevating plasma acyl-ghrelin via a 24-h fast also failed to raise plasma GH and resulted in a limited hyperphagic response upon food reintroduction in mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, although those mice nonetheless did not exhibit an exaggerated reduction in blood glucose. Physiologically elevating plasma acyl-ghrelin via a 15-day caloric restriction protocol which provided only 40% of usual daily calories failed to raise plasma GH in mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, although those mice did not exhibit life-threatening hypoglycemia. CONCLUSIONS: These results reveal that direct engagement of GHSR-expressing somatotrophs is required for a peripheral ghrelin bolus to acutely stimulate GH secretion and the actions of chronic acyl-ghrelin delivery and physiological plasma acyl-ghrelin elevations to increase plasma GH. These results also suggest that actions of acyl-ghrelin to increase food intake and body weight are reliant on direct activation of GHSRs expressed on somatotrophs. Furthermore, these results suggest that the glucoregulatory actions of acyl-ghrelin – in particular, its actions to raise blood glucose when acutely administered, prevent small blood glucose drops following a 24-h fast, and avert life-threatening hypoglycemia during an acute-on-chronic caloric restriction protocol – do not depend on GHSR expression by somatotrophs.
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spelling pubmed-82038462021-06-21 Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions Gupta, Deepali Patterson, Anna M. Osborne-Lawrence, Sherri Bookout, Angie L. Varshney, Salil Shankar, Kripa Singh, Omprakash Metzger, Nathan P. Richard, Corine P. Wyler, Steven C. Elmquist, Joel K. Zigman, Jeffrey M. Mol Metab Original Article OBJECTIVE: Acyl-ghrelin regulates eating, body weight, blood glucose, and GH secretion upon binding to its receptor GHSR (growth hormone secretagogue receptor; ghrelin receptor). GHSR is distributed in several brain regions and some peripheral cell-types including pituitary somatotrophs. The objective of the current study was to determine the functional significance of acyl-ghrelin's action on GHSR-expressing somatotrophs in mediating GH secretion and several of acyl-ghrelin's metabolic actions. METHODS: GH-IRES-Cre mice and loxP-flanked (floxed) GHSR mice were newly developed and then crossed to one another to generate mice that lacked GHSR selectively from somatotrophs. Following validation of mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, metabolic responses of these mice and control littermates were assessed following both acute and chronic acyl-ghrelin administration, a 24-h fast, and a prolonged 60% chronic caloric restriction protocol modeling starvation. RESULTS: In mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, a single peripheral injection of acyl-ghrelin failed to induce GH secretion or increase food intake, unlike wild-type and other littermate control groups. However, the usual acute blood glucose increase in response to the acyl-ghrelin bolus was preserved. Similarly, chronic s.c. acyl-ghrelin administration to mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion failed to increase plasma GH, food intake, or body weight. Physiologically elevating plasma acyl-ghrelin via a 24-h fast also failed to raise plasma GH and resulted in a limited hyperphagic response upon food reintroduction in mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, although those mice nonetheless did not exhibit an exaggerated reduction in blood glucose. Physiologically elevating plasma acyl-ghrelin via a 15-day caloric restriction protocol which provided only 40% of usual daily calories failed to raise plasma GH in mice with somatotroph-selective GHSR deletion, although those mice did not exhibit life-threatening hypoglycemia. CONCLUSIONS: These results reveal that direct engagement of GHSR-expressing somatotrophs is required for a peripheral ghrelin bolus to acutely stimulate GH secretion and the actions of chronic acyl-ghrelin delivery and physiological plasma acyl-ghrelin elevations to increase plasma GH. These results also suggest that actions of acyl-ghrelin to increase food intake and body weight are reliant on direct activation of GHSRs expressed on somatotrophs. Furthermore, these results suggest that the glucoregulatory actions of acyl-ghrelin – in particular, its actions to raise blood glucose when acutely administered, prevent small blood glucose drops following a 24-h fast, and avert life-threatening hypoglycemia during an acute-on-chronic caloric restriction protocol – do not depend on GHSR expression by somatotrophs. Elsevier 2021-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8203846/ /pubmed/34023483 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101258 Text en © 2021 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Gupta, Deepali
Patterson, Anna M.
Osborne-Lawrence, Sherri
Bookout, Angie L.
Varshney, Salil
Shankar, Kripa
Singh, Omprakash
Metzger, Nathan P.
Richard, Corine P.
Wyler, Steven C.
Elmquist, Joel K.
Zigman, Jeffrey M.
Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
title Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
title_full Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
title_fullStr Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
title_full_unstemmed Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
title_short Disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
title_sort disrupting the ghrelin-growth hormone axis limits ghrelin's orexigenic but not glucoregulatory actions
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8203846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34023483
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2021.101258
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