JCI Insight (Nov 2022)

Dopamine-inhibited POMCDrd2+ neurons in the ARC acutely regulate feeding and body temperature

  • Isabella Gaziano,
  • Svenja Corneliussen,
  • Nasim Biglari,
  • René Neuhaus,
  • Linyan Shen,
  • Tamara Sotelo-Hitschfeld,
  • Paul Klemm,
  • Lukas Steuernagel,
  • Alain J. De Solis,
  • Weiyi Chen,
  • F. Thomas Wunderlich,
  • Peter Kloppenburg,
  • Jens C. Brüning

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 21

Abstract

Read online

Dopamine acts on neurons in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) of the hypothalamus, which controls homeostatic feeding responses. Here we demonstrate a differential enrichment of dopamine receptor 1 (Drd1) expression in food intake–promoting agouti related peptide (AgRP)/neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons and a large proportion of Drd2-expressing anorexigenic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons. Owing to the nature of these receptors, this translates into a predominant activation of AgRP/NPY neurons upon dopamine stimulation and a larger proportion of dopamine-inhibited POMC neurons. Employing intersectional targeting of Drd2-expressing POMC neurons, we reveal that dopamine-mediated POMC neuron inhibition is Drd2 dependent and that POMCDrd2+ neurons exhibit differential expression of neuropeptide signaling mediators compared with the global POMC neuron population, which manifests in enhanced somatostatin responsiveness of POMCDrd2+ neurons. Selective chemogenetic activation of POMCDrd2+ neurons uncovered their ability to acutely suppress feeding and to preserve body temperature in fasted mice. Collectively, the present study provides the molecular and functional characterization of POMCDrd2+ neurons and aids our understanding of dopamine-dependent control of homeostatic energy-regulatory neurocircuits.

Keywords