4.7 Article

From hunger to satiety:: Reconfiguration of a feeding network by Aplysia neuropeptide Y

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 27, Issue 13, Pages 3490-3502

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0334-07.2007

Keywords

PYY; feeding; satiation; ingestion; egestion; motivational state

Categories

Funding

  1. NIDA NIH HHS [DA 13330, P30 DA 018310, P30 DA018310, R01 DA013330] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH035564, F32 MH011586, R01 MH 50235, MH 035564, R01 MH050235] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS 031609, R01 NS031609] Funding Source: Medline

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A shift in motivational state often produces behavioral change, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. In the marine mollusc, Aplysia californica, feeding-induced transition from a hunger to satiation state leads to a slowdown and an eventual termination of feeding. Because the multifunctional feeding network generates both ingestion and the competing response, egestion, it is possible that the transition from a hunger to a satiety state is associated with network reconfiguration that results in production of fewer ingestive and more egestive responses. Chronic electrophysiological recordings in free-feeding Aplysia showed that as the meal progressed, food elicited fewer ingestive responses and simultaneously increased the number of egestive responses. Injections of Aplysia neuropeptide Y (apNPY) reduced food intake and slowed down the rate of ingestion. apNPY was localized to buccal-ganglion afferents originating in the gut-innervating esophageal nerve (EN), a nerve involved both in satiation and in the generation of egestive programs. During EN stimulation, apNPY was released in the feeding circuit. Importantly, stimulation of the cerebral-buccal interneuron-2, a command-like interneuron that is activated by food and normally elicits ingestive responses, elicited egestive responses in the presence of apNPY. This was accompanied by increased activity of the egestion-promoting interneuron B20 and decreased activity in the ingestion-promoting interneuron B40. Thus, apNPYergic reconfiguration of the feeding central pattern generator plays a role in the gradual transition from hunger to satiety states. More generally, changes in the motivational states may involve not only simple network inhibition but may also require network reconfiguration.

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