4.8 Article

Circulating glucose levels modulate neural control of desire for high-calorie foods in humans

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 121, Issue 10, Pages 4161-4169

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI57873

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [DK 20495, P30 DK 45735, T32 DA022975, T32 DK07058, UL1-DE019586, PL1-DA024859]
  2. Clinical and Translational Science Award [UL1 RR024139]
  3. Yale Stress Center

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Obesity is a worldwide epidemic resulting in part from the ubiquity of high-calorie foods and food images. Whether obese and nonobese individuals regulate their desire to consume high-calorie foods differently is not clear. We set out to investigate the hypothesis that circulating levels of glucose, the primary fuel source for the brain, influence brain regions that regulate the motivation to consume high-calorie foods. Using functional Mill (fMRI) combined with a stepped hyperinsulinemic euglycemic-hypoglycemic clamp and behavioral measures of interest in food, we have shown here that mild hypoglycemia preferentially activates limbic-striatal brain regions in response to food cues to produce a greater desire for high-calorie foods. In contrast, euglycemia preferentially activated the medial prefrontal cortex and resulted in less interest in food stimuli. Indeed, higher circulating glucose levels predicted greater medial prefrontal cortex activation, and this response was absent in obese subjects. These findings demonstrate that circulating glucose modulates neural stimulatory and inhibitory control over food motivation and suggest that this glucose-linked restraining influence is lost in obesity. Strategies that temper postprandial reductions in glucose levels might reduce the risk of overeating, particularly in environments inundated with visual cues of high-calorie foods.

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