Orexin A Preferentially Excites Glucose-Sensitive Neurons in the Lateral Hypothalamus of the Rat In Vitro
- 1Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Group, Department of Medicine University of Liverpool, Liverpool, U.K.
- 2Department of Preclinical Veterinary Science University of Liverpool, Liverpool, U.K.
- 3School of Biological Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, U.K.
Abstract
Falls in blood glucose induce hunger and initiate feeding. The lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) contains glucose-sensitive neurons (GSNs) and orexin neurons, both of which are stimulated by falling blood glucose and are implicated in hypoglycemia-induced feeding. We combined intracellular electrophysiological recording with fluorescein labeling of GSNs to determine their neuroanatomic and functional relationships with orexin neurons. Orexin A (1 μmol/l) caused a 500% increase (P < 0.01) in spontaneous firing rate and rapid and lasting depolarization that was tetrodotoxin-resistant and thus a direct postsynaptic effect. Orexin A altered the intrinsic neuronal properties of GSNs, consistent with increased excitability. Confocal microscopy showed that GSNs were intimately related to orexin neurons: orexin-immunoreactive axons were frequently entwined around GSN dendrites, establishing close and putatively synaptic contacts. Orexin-cell axons also passed in close proximity to glucose-responsive neurons, which are inhibited by low glucose, but orexin A caused smaller depolarization than on GSNs and only a 200% increase in spontaneous firing rate (P < 0.05 vs. GSN). We conclude that GSNs are specific target neurons for orexin A and suggest that they may mediate, at least in part, the acute appetite-stimulating effect of orexin A. Orexin neurons may regulate GSNs so as to control the onset and termination of hypoglycemia-induced feeding.
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Gareth Williams, Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Group, Department of Medicine, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 3GS, U.K. E-mail: garethw{at}liverpool.ac.uk.
Received for publication 2 April 2001 and accepted in revised form 19 July 2001.
G.W. has received research support from SmithKline Beecham.
aCSF, artificial cerebrospinal fluid; GRN, glucose-responsive neuron; GSN, glucose-sensitive neuron; LHA, lateral hypothalamic area; NTS, nucleus of the solitary tract; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; Vm, resting membrane potential.














