Publication | Open Access
A link between FTO, ghrelin, and impaired brain food-cue responsivity
379
Citations
65
References
2013
Year
NeuropsychologyGeneticsFood IntakeGhrelin MrnaHypothalamic CircuitsSocial SciencesObesityMetabolic SyndromeHypothalamic PeptideCognitive NeuroscienceAppetite ControlFat MassEnergy HomeostasisCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceHuman Ingestive BehaviorNervous SystemEndocrinologyNeurophysiologyPhysiologyNutritional NeuroscienceMetabolic RegulationNeuroscienceMedicine
Polymorphisms in the FTO gene are linked to obesity and a preference for energy‑dense foods, but the mechanisms by which FTO influences human obesity remain unclear. In normal‑weight adults, the FTO rs9939609 A allele is associated with dysregulated ghrelin levels, attenuated appetite reduction after meals, and altered neural responses to food cues and ghrelin, while cellular overexpression of FTO increases ghrelin mRNA and peptide, demonstrating that FTO regulates ghrelin to promote energy intake and obesity.
Polymorphisms in the fat mass and obesity-associated gene (FTO) are associated with human obesity and obesity-prone behaviors, including increased food intake and a preference for energy-dense foods. FTO demethylates N6-methyladenosine, a potential regulatory RNA modification, but the mechanisms by which FTO predisposes humans to obesity remain unclear. In adiposity-matched, normal-weight humans, we showed that subjects homozygous for the FTO "obesity-risk" rs9939609 A allele have dysregulated circulating levels of the orexigenic hormone acyl-ghrelin and attenuated postprandial appetite reduction. Using functional MRI (fMRI) in normal-weight AA and TT humans, we found that the FTO genotype modulates the neural responses to food images in homeostatic and brain reward regions. Furthermore, AA and TT subjects exhibited divergent neural responsiveness to circulating acyl-ghrelin within brain regions that regulate appetite, reward processing, and incentive motivation. In cell models, FTO overexpression reduced ghrelin mRNA N6-methyladenosine methylation, concomitantly increasing ghrelin mRNA and peptide levels. Furthermore, peripheral blood cells from AA human subjects exhibited increased FTO mRNA, reduced ghrelin mRNA N6-methyladenosine methylation, and increased ghrelin mRNA abundance compared with TT subjects. Our findings show that FTO regulates ghrelin, a key mediator of ingestive behavior, and offer insight into how FTO obesity-risk alleles predispose to increased energy intake and obesity in humans.
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