Essential and sex-specific effects of mGluR5 in ventromedial hypothalamus regulating estrogen signaling and glucose balance.
Micaella P FaganDominique AmerosoAlice MengAnna RockJamie MaguireMaribel RiosPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
The ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) plays chief roles regulating energy and glucose homeostasis and is sexually dimorphic. We discovered that expression of metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5 (mGluR5) in the VMH is regulated by caloric status in normal mice and reduced in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mutants, which are severely obese and have diminished glucose balance control. These findings led us to investigate whether mGluR5 might act downstream of BDNF to critically regulate VMH neuronal activity and metabolic function. We found that mGluR5 depletion in VMH SF1 neurons did not affect energy balance regulation. However, it significantly impaired insulin sensitivity, glycemic control, lipid metabolism, and sympathetic output in females but not in males. These sex-specific deficits are linked to reductions in intrinsic excitability and firing rate of SF1 neurons. Abnormal excitatory and inhibitory synapse assembly and elevated expression of the GABAergic synthetic enzyme GAD67 also cooperate to decrease and potentiate the synaptic excitatory and inhibitory tone onto mutant SF1 neurons, respectively. Notably, these alterations arise from disrupted functional interactions of mGluR5 with estrogen receptors that switch the normally positive effects of estrogen on SF1 neuronal activity and glucose balance control to paradoxical and detrimental. The collective data inform an essential central mechanism regulating metabolic function in females and underlying the protective effects of estrogen against metabolic disease.
Keyphrases
- blood glucose
- glycemic control
- estrogen receptor
- type diabetes
- poor prognosis
- spinal cord
- prefrontal cortex
- weight loss
- adipose tissue
- wild type
- binding protein
- metabolic syndrome
- traumatic brain injury
- spinal cord injury
- blood pressure
- long non coding rna
- brain injury
- big data
- electronic health record
- cerebral ischemia
- obese patients
- skeletal muscle
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- high fat diet induced