4.5 Review

The endocannabinoid system, eating behavior and energy homeostasis: The end or a new beginning?

Journal

PHARMACOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 95, Issue 4, Pages 375-382

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pbb.2010.03.012

Keywords

Cannabinoids; CB1; CB2; Energy homeostasis; Obesity; Metabolic syndrome; Rimonabant; Inverse agonism

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo (Plan Nacional sobre Drogas) [PND2006/142]
  2. MCYT [SAF 2004-07762]
  3. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [FIS 07/0880]
  4. Consejerias de Innovacion y de Salud de la Junta de Andalucia [PI-0232/2008]
  5. Fundacion Eugenio Rodriguez Pascual, Red de Trastornos Adictivos [RD06/0001/1013]
  6. GRUPOS UCM-BSCH [951579]
  7. Ministerio de Ciencia e innovacion [BFU2009-10109]
  8. National System of Health (Instituto de Salud Carlos III) [CP07/00283]

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The endocannabinoid system (ECS) consists of two receptors (CB1 and CB2), several endogenous ligands (primarily anandamide and 2-AG), and over a dozen ligand-metabolizing enzymes. The ECS regulates many aspects of embryological development and homeostasis, including neuroprotection and neural plasticity, immunity and inflammation, apoptosis and carcinogenesis, pain and emotional memory, and the focus of this review: hunger, feeding, and metabolism. This mini-review summarizes the main findings that supported the clinical use of CB1 antagonists/inverse agonists, the clinical concerns that have emerged, and the possible future of cannabinoid-based therapy of obesity and related diseases. The ECS controls energy balance and lipid metabolism centrally (in the hypothalamus and mesolimbic pathways) and peripherally (in adipocytes, liver, skeletal muscle and pancreatic islet cells), acting through numerous anorexigenic and orexigenic pathways. Obese people seem to display an increased endocannabinoid tone, driving CB1 receptor in a feed-forward dysfunction. Several CB1 antagonists/inverse agonists have been developed for the treatment of obesity. Although these drugs were found to be efficacious at reducing food intake as well as abdominal adiposity and cardiometabolic risk factors, they resulted in adverse psychiatric effects that limited their use and finally led to the end of the clinical use of systemic CB1 ligands with significant inverse agonist activity for complicated obesity. However, the existence of alternatives such as CB1 partial agonists, neutral antagonists, antagonists restricted to the periphery, allosteric modulators and other potential targets within the ECS indite that a cannabinoid-based therapy for the management of obesity and its associated cardiometabolic sequelae should remain open for consideration. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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