Abstract

The brain can be viewed as a sophisticated control module for stabilizing blood glucose. A review of classical behavioural evidence indicates that central circuits add predictive (feedforward/anticipatory) control to the reactive (feedback/compensatory) control by peripheral organs. The brain/cephalic control is constructed and engaged, via associative learning, by sensory cues predicting energy intake or expenditure (e.g. sight, smell, taste, sound). This allows rapidly measurable sensory information (rather than slowly generated internal feedback signals, e.g. digested nutrients) to control food selection, glucose supply for fight-or-flight responses or preparedness for digestion/absorption. Predictive control is therefore useful for preventing large glucose fluctuations. We review emerging roles in predictive control of two classes of widely projecting hypothalamic neurones, orexin/hypocretin (ORX) and melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) cells. Evidence is cited that ORX neurones (i) are activated by sensory cues (e.g. taste, sound), (ii) drive hepatic production, and muscle uptake, of glucose, via sympathetic nerves, (iii) stimulate wakefulness and exploration via global brain projections and (iv) are glucose-inhibited. MCH neurones are (i) glucose-excited, (ii) innervate learning and reward centres to promote synaptic plasticity, learning and memory and (iii) are critical for learning associations useful for predictive control (e.g. using taste to predict nutrient value of food). This evidence is unified into a model for predictive glucose control. During associative learning, inputs from some glucose-excited neurones may promote connections between the ‘fast’ senses and reward circuits, constructing neural shortcuts for efficient action selection. In turn, glucose-inhibited neurones may engage locomotion/exploration and coordinate the required fuel supply. Feedback inhibition of the latter neurones by glucose would ensure that glucose fluxes they stimulate (from liver, into muscle) are balanced. Estimating nutrient challenges from indirect sensory cues may become more difficult when the cues become complex and variable (e.g. like human foods today). Consequent errors of predictive glucose control may contribute to obesity and diabetes.

Highlights

  • The lateral hypothalamus, which controls food choice and glucose levels as described below, contains neurones that respond to food-associated cues during hunger but not satiety, that is only when the animal is likely to ingest the food (Burton et al 1976, Mora et al 1976, Rolls et al 1976)

  • Forward-planning actions of the brain would make glucose control more efficient, which can be viewed as an evolutionary advantage

  • Predictive and reactive strategies form a useful control scheme, both fast and self-correcting. This could be an evolutionary rationale for why the peripheral organs and the brain came to cooperate in controlling glucose levels (Fig. 1c)

Read more

Summary

Predictive controller Brain

The brain has to estimate how likely an event (or a neutral event cue) is to change blood glucose level. We will discuss a circuit model where predictive control, including associative learning, is linked to glucose-sensing neurones. As background for this model, we first review experimental data on brain glucosesensing neurones. Glucose-sensing responses are distinct from ubiquitous silencing of neurones by low glucose (Fig. 2) They are not seen in most neurones in the brain, whose glucosephosphorylating enzymes are thought to have km values of around 40 lM, and so presumably saturate and do not change intracellular energy levels upon glucose fluctuations >1 mM (Qutub & Hunt 2005).

Extracellular glucose level
MCH neurones and predictive control
Glucose sensing and control by MCH neurones
MCH neurones and associative learning for predictive control
Wake cells
Activation of ORX neurones by cues predicting imminent glucose change
Inhibition of ORX neurones by glucose
Glucoseexcited neurons
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.