Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8632825 | Metabolism | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Our data are the first to document the nature and magnitude of the regulatory actions of RFRP-3/NPFF1R signaling in the control of feeding and metabolic homeostasis in a physiological setting. Our results not only suggest an orexigenic action of endogenous RFRP-3, specifically in males, but reveal also the detrimental impact of ablation of NPFF1R signaling on body composition, energy expenditure, locomotor activity or glucose balance, especially when concurrent with other obesogenic insults, as HFD, thereby providing the first evidence for additional metabolic effects of RFRP-3, other that the mere control of feeding. Interestingly, alterations of such key metabolic parameters occurred in a sex-biased manner, with males being more sensitive to deregulation of locomotor activity and glycemic control, while females displayed clearer obesogenic responses and deregulated energy expenditure. While our study cannot discard the possibility of RFRP-3 actions via alternative pathways, such as NPFF2R, our data pave the way for future analyses addressing the eventual contribution of altered RFRP-3/NPFF1R signaling in the development of metabolic alterations (including obesity and its comorbidities), especially in conditions associated to reproductive dysfunction.
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Authors
Silvia Leon, Inmaculada Velasco, Maria J. Vázquez, Alexia Barroso, Daniel Beiroa, Violeta Heras, Francisco Ruiz-Pino, Maria Manfredi-Lozano, Antonio Romero-Ruiz, Miguel A. Sanchez-Garrido, Carlos Dieguez, Leonor Pinilla, Juan Roa, Ruben Nogueiras,