CaMK1D signalling in AgRP neurons promotes ghrelin-mediated food intake.

Journal: Nature Metabolism
Published:
Abstract

Hypothalamic AgRP/NPY neurons are key players in the control of feeding behaviour. Ghrelin, a major orexigenic hormone, activates AgRP/NPY neurons to stimulate food intake and adiposity. However, cell-autonomous ghrelin-dependent signalling mechanisms in AgRP/NPY neurons remain poorly defined. Here we show that calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase ID (CaMK1D), a genetic hot spot in type 2 diabetes, is activated upon ghrelin stimulation and acts in AgRP/NPY neurons to mediate ghrelin-dependent food intake. Global Camk1d-knockout male mice are resistant to ghrelin, gain less body weight and are protected against high-fat-diet-induced obesity. Deletion of Camk1d in AgRP/NPY, but not in POMC, neurons is sufficient to recapitulate above phenotypes. In response to ghrelin, lack of CaMK1D attenuates phosphorylation of CREB and CREB-dependent expression of the orexigenic neuropeptides AgRP/NPY in fibre projections to the paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Hence, CaMK1D links ghrelin action to transcriptional control of orexigenic neuropeptide availability in AgRP neurons.

Authors
Karl Vivot, Gergö Meszaros, Evanthia Pangou, Zhirong Zhang, Mengdi Qu, Eric Erbs, Gagik Yeghiazaryan, Mar Quiñones, Erwan Grandgirard, Anna Schneider, Etienne Clauss Creusot, Alexandre Charlet, Maya Faour, Claire Martin, Fedor Berditchevski, Izabela Sumara, Serge Luquet, Peter Kloppenburg, Ruben Nogueiras, Romeo Ricci
Relevant Conditions

Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes (T2D)