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October 27, 2006|Volume 35, Number 8


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Stomach hormone activates region of brain that controls reward behavior, study finds

Ghrelin, a hormone produced in the stomach, induces food intake and operates through a brain region that controls cravings for food and other energy sources, researchers at the School of Medicine report in the Oct. 19 online issue of The Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Ghrelin was previously associated with growth hormone release, appetite, learning and memory, and has now been linked with the reward circuitry of the brain that regulates food cravings.

According to lead author Tamas Horvath, components of the reward circuitry of the ventral tegmental area (VTA), may be responsible for overeating and addiction.

"Targeting this region pharmacologically is an interesting tool to explore," says Horvath, chair of the Section of Comparative Medicine at the School of Medicine and professor of comparative medicine, neurobiology and obstetrics, gynecology & reproductive sciences.

In this study, Horvath and colleagues found that ghrelin could signal directly in the VTA region and activate dopamine neuronal activity, which controls reward-associated behavior to promote interest in food as a reward. As a default, ghrelin's action may also alter seeking of drugs and substances that work through the same pathways.

"We found that if we selectively block ghrelin in this part of the brain, we can suppress feeding or the need to seek out food and energy," says Horvath. "It also suggests that perhaps it could interfere with the need to seek out drugs as well."

Horvath says ghrelin, which was originally found to signal in the hypothalamus, has now been shown to have a broad influence on various brain functions.

"This makes sense because the major driving force of life is seeking energy to survive," he says. "Future studies will explore the relationships between ghrelin and cocaine addiction."

The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease of the National Institutes of Health funded the study.

Other authors on the study include first author Alfonso Abizaid, Zhong-Wu Liu, Zane B. Andrews, Marya Shanabrough, Erzsebet Borok, John Elsworth, Robert Roth, Mark Sleeman, Marina Picciotto, Matthias Tschop and Xiao-Bing Gao.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

With 31 winners, Yale has most Fulbright recipients this year

Grants to support research on adolescent parents and HIV/STI

Joint Yale-Chile astronomy program has been renewed

Divinity School exhibit shows human impact of Iraq war

Three Divinity School faculty members appointed to endowed posts

Scientist's molecular research yields clues about herbal therapies

V.P. Shauna King announces changes in Office of Finance and Administration

Using writing as a creative outlet brings benefits to medical residents

Nobel laureate to discuss the threat of nuclear proliferatio

Yale's Witt will help coach U.S. team at Four Nations Cup

Stomach hormone activates region of brain that controls reward . . .

Study by School of Medicine researchers shows low levels of oxygen . . .

Study shows genes and life stress interact in the brain

New concert series will offer fresh look at chamber music

Yale Cancer Center and YNHH offer free programs on cancer treatmen

Medical school and hospital honored for rapid response team in pediatric

Memorial service for Dr. Paul Beeson

U.N. official's talk rescheduled

Images of Autumn

Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes


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