4.8 Article

A Postsynaptic AMPK→p21-Activated Kinase Pathway Drives Fasting-Induced Synaptic Plasticity in AgRP Neurons

期刊

NEURON
卷 91, 期 1, 页码 25-33

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.05.025

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资金

  1. NINDS [P30 NS047243, NS046579, R21 NS097922]
  2. NEI [5P30EY012196-17]
  3. NIDDK [R01 DK096010, R01 DK089044, R01 DK071051, R01 DK075632, R37 DK053477, R01 DK098002, K01 DK094943, R01 DK108797]
  4. BNORC [P30 DK046200, PF P30 DK046200]
  5. BADERC [P30 DK57521]
  6. AHA [SDG 13SDG14620005, 14POST20100011]
  7. Charles Hood Foundation
  8. BIDMC-FNL

向作者/读者索取更多资源

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays an important role in regulating food intake. The downstream AMPK substrates and neurobiological mechanisms responsible for this, however, are ill defined. Agouti-related peptide (AgRP)-expressing neurons in the arcuate nucleus regulate hunger. Their firing increases with fasting, and once engaged they cause feeding. AgRP neuron activity is regulated by state-dependent synaptic plasticity: fasting increases dendritic spines and excitatory synaptic activity; feeding does the opposite. The signaling mechanisms underlying this, however, are also unknown. Using neuron-specific approaches to measure and manipulate kinase activity specifically within AgRP neurons, we establish that fasting increases AMPK activity in AgRP neurons, that increased AMPK activity in AgRP neurons is both necessary and sufficient for fasting-induced spinogenesis and excitatory synaptic activity, and that the AMPK phosphorylation target mediating this plasticity is p21-activated kinase. This provides a signaling and neurobiological basis for both AMPK regulation of energy balance and AgRP neuron state-dependent plasticity.

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