Abstract

Gut-derived satiety hormones provide negative feedback to suppress food intake and maintain metabolic function in peripheral tissues. Despite the wealth of knowledge of the systemic effects of these hormones, very little is known concerning the mechanisms by which nutrients, such as dietary fats, can promote the expression of genes involved in L-cell hormone production. We have tested the role of various dietary fats and found that after hydrolysis into free fatty acids (FFA’s), there is a differential response in the extent to which they induce PYY gene and protein production. The effect of FFA’s also seems to relate to triglyceride (TG) re-esterification rate, with MUFA re-esterifying faster with lower PYY production. We have also found that there are differences in potency of FFA’s based on their desaturation patterns in vitro. The potency effect of FFA’s is influenced by the rate of TG re-esterification, such that the longer FFA’s are in contact with L-cells, the more PYY they produce. We found that chronic consumption of high-fat diets enables the small intestine to re-esterify FFA’s into TG faster and earlier which resulted in a blunted postprandial PYY response. Lastly, we found that FFA’s induce X-box-binding protein-1 activation (Xbp1s) in L-cells and that adenoviral delivery of Xbp1s was sufficient to induce PYY gene expression. Taken together, the present work indicates that dietary fat can induce satiety, in part, prior to re-esterification. Chronic high-fat diet consumption increases the rate of re-esterification which diminishes satiety and may lead to increased food intake. Targeting intestinal TG synthesis may prove beneficial in restoring obesity-associated reductions in postprandial satiety.

Highlights

  • Peptide tyrosine tyrosine (PYY) is a peptide hormone produced and secreted by enteroendocrine L-cells of the ileum and colon in response to nutrient supply

  • We knew from our previous work that fatty acid composition differentially affected PYY responses [3,4,18,19]

  • We hypothesized that different free fatty acids (FFA’s) can directly affect the magnitude of PYY release based on differences in desaturation

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Summary

Introduction

Peptide tyrosine tyrosine (PYY) is a peptide hormone produced and secreted by enteroendocrine L-cells of the ileum and colon in response to nutrient supply. When released from L-cells, PYY reduces food intake through inhibitory signaling via neuronal receptors in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus. PYY improves insulin release and reduces exocrine pancreatic secretions. PYY slows gastric motility, slows absorption of macro- and micronutrients, and produces systemic feelings of fullness [1,2]. A major nutrient that induces PYY release and satiety is dietary fat, with varying degrees of PYY release based on fatty acid composition [3,4]. Despite the knowledge of PYY’s effects on tissues beyond the L-cell, nothing is known regarding how nutrient–gene interactions produce PYY at the mRNA level

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