Oxytocin and appetite

Gareth Leng, Tatsushi Onaka, Celine Caquineau, Nancy Sabatier, Vicky A. Tobin, Yuki Takayanagi

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract / Description of output

Oxytocin has potent central effects on feeding behaviour, as well as on social and sexual behaviours, and one likely substrate for its anorectic effect is the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus. This nucleus expresses a high density of oxytocin receptors, but contains very few oxytocin-containing fibres, hence it is a likely target of 'neurohormonal' actions of oxytocin, including possibly oxytocin released from the dendrites of magnocellular oxytocin neurones. As oxytocin release from dendrites is regulated independent of electrical activity and of secretion from the neurohypophysis, exactly how this release is regulated by metabolic and reproduction-related signals remains to be established fully. Intriguingly though, it looks as though this central release of oxytocin from magnocellular neurons might be instrumental in a fundamental shift in motivational behaviour - switching behaviour from being driven by the need to find and consume food, to the need to reproduce.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationADVANCES IN VASOPRESSIN AND OXYTOCIN: FROM GENES TO BEHAVIOUR TO DISEASE
EditorsID Neumann, R Landgraf
Place of PublicationAMSTERDAM
PublisherElsevier
Pages137-151
Number of pages15
ISBN (Print)978-0-444-53201-5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008
Event7th World Congress on Neurohypophysial Hormones - Regensburg
Duration: 18 Sept 200722 Sept 2007

Conference

Conference7th World Congress on Neurohypophysial Hormones
CityRegensburg
Period18/09/0722/09/07

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Oxytocin and appetite'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this