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Microglial Inflammatory Signaling Orchestrates the Hypothalamic Immune Response to Dietary Excess and Mediates Obesity Susceptibility.

Citation
Valdearcos, M., et al. “Microglial Inflammatory Signaling Orchestrates The Hypothalamic Immune Response To Dietary Excess And Mediates Obesity Susceptibility.”. Cell Metabolism, pp. 185-197.e3.
Center University of Washington
Multicenter
Multicenter
Featured
Author Martin Valdearcos, John D Douglass, Megan M Robblee, Mauricio D Dorfman, Daniel R Stifler, Mariko L Bennett, Irene Gerritse, Rachael Fasnacht, Ben A Barres, Joshua P Thaler, Suneil K Koliwad
Keywords energy balance, gliosis, hypothalamus, infiltration, inflammation, microglia, myeloid cell, obesity
Abstract

Dietary excess triggers accumulation of pro-inflammatory microglia in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH), but the components of this microgliosis and its metabolic consequences remain uncertain. Here, we show that microglial inflammatory signaling determines the immunologic response of the MBH to dietary excess and regulates hypothalamic control of energy homeostasis in mice. Either pharmacologically depleting microglia or selectively restraining microglial NF-κB-dependent signaling sharply reduced microgliosis, an effect that includes prevention of MBH entry by bone-marrow-derived myeloid cells, and greatly limited diet-induced hyperphagia and weight gain. Conversely, forcing microglial activation through cell-specific deletion of the negative NF-κB regulator A20 induced spontaneous MBH microgliosis and cellular infiltration, reduced energy expenditure, and increased both food intake and weight gain even in absence of a dietary challenge. Thus, microglial inflammatory activation, stimulated by dietary excess, orchestrates a multicellular hypothalamic response that mediates obesity susceptibility, providing a mechanistic rationale for non-neuronal approaches to treat metabolic diseases.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cell metabolism
Volume
26
Issue
1
Number of Pages
185-197.e3
Date Published
07/2017
ISSN Number
1932-7420
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2017.05.015
Alternate Journal
Cell Metab.
PMID
28683286
PMCID
PMC5569901
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