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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 2002, 22(12):5091-5099
Involvement of the Arcuate Nucleus of the Hypothalamus in
Interleukin-1-Induced Anorexia
Teresa M.
Reyes and
Paul E.
Sawchenko
Laboratory of Neuronal Structure and Function, The Salk Institute
for Biological Studies and Foundation for Medical Research, La Jolla,
California 92037
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ABSTRACT |
Cytokine-mediated anorexia is a component of "sickness
behavior" and presents a significant obstacle in the treatment of
chronic illnesses. We hypothesized an involvement of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARH) in mediating the anorexic effects of a systemic interleukin-1 (IL-1) challenge based on its content of peptidergic neurons involved in feeding, its expression of IL-1 receptors and its
sensitivity to systemic IL-1. IL-1 (6 µg/kg, i.v.) was found to
induce Fos expression in both pro-opiomelanocortin- and neuropeptide
Y-expressing neurons in and around the ARH. Contrary to expectations,
rats that had sustained lesions of the arcuate nucleus, produced by
neonatal monosodium glutamate treatment, displayed a more pronounced
suppression (by 25%) of food intake than nonlesioned controls when
treated with IL-1 after a 20 hr fast. To confirm and further
characterize this unexpected result, a second ablation method was used
in a similar paradigm. Animals bearing knife cuts designed to sever
major ARH projections displayed an even more accentuated loss of
appetite (by 60%, relative to controls) in response to systemic IL-1.
This effect exhibited at least some degree of specificity, because the
knife cuts did not alter either IL-1 effects on another centrally
mediated acute phase response (fever) or the anorexia produced by an
alternate agent, fenfluramine. These results fail to support the
hypothesized ARH mediation of IL-1-induced anorexia and may suggest
rather that the net output of this cell group may serve normally to
restrain cytokine-induced reductions in food intake.
Key words:
anorexia; arcuate nucleus; interleukin-1; neuropeptide Y; proopiomelanocortin; sickness behavior
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INTRODUCTION |
When humans or animals sustain an
infection or severe tissue trauma, the immune system is activated as a
primary line of defense. Activated leukocytes are recruited to the
afflicted site or sites and release cytokines into the circulation.
These proteins modulate the immune response by recruiting or blocking
the actions of other immune cells. Additionally, cytokines mediate a
"second line of defense" by acting on the CNS to coordinate a
constellation of responses, sometimes referred to as "sickness
behavior" (Hart, 1988 ). Such responses, which include anorexia,
fever, somnolence, and lethargy, are adaptive in the near term (Hart,
1990 ), although they may become injurious if repeated or sustained.
Furthermore, potentially beneficial immunotherapies involving long-term
cytokine administration have proven impractical because of these very
CNS side effects (Smith et al., 1990 ). The goal of the present studies was to achieve a better understanding of the neural substrates underlying one of these behaviors, specifically cytokine-mediated anorexia.
The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1 (IL-1) is rapidly released
in response to infection or inflammation and can elicit a wide range of
acute phase responses, including sickness behaviors, when given
exogenously (Kent et al., 1996 ; Dantzer, 2001 ). Either systemic or
central administration of IL-1 induces anorexia, ostensibly by way of
actions exerted within the brain. Intracerebroventricular administration of an IL-1 receptor antagonist attenuates the
appetite-reducing effects of systemic cytokine injection (Kent et al.,
1992 ), suggesting either that IL-1 stimulates its own production within
the brain or that circulating IL-1 may access the brain parenchyma.
IL-1, a large hydrophilic protein, is unlikely to cross the
blood-brain barrier (BBB) in biologically significant concentrations.
However, numerous pathways have been hypothesized to explain how
cytokines in the periphery come to influence CNS functioning, including (1) transduction by peripheral nerves (i.e., the vagus nerve; Watkins
et al., 1995 ; Bluthe et al., 1996 ), (2) mechanisms involving the BBB,
either via induction of local signaling molecules (e.g., nitric oxide,
prostaglandins) by cells associated with the cerebral microvasculature
(Van Dam et al., 1996 ) or through active transport across the barrier
(Banks and Kastin, 1991 ), or (3) direct actions on circumventricular
structures of the brain that lay outside the BBB (Blatteis, 1992 ).
Several lines of evidence point toward the arcuate nucleus of the
hypothalamus (ARH) as playing a role in IL-1-induced anorexia. The ARH
is one of the few cell groups in rat brain where type I IL-1 receptors
(IL-1R1) appear to be expressed by centrally projecting neurons
(Ericsson et al., 1995 ), and it exhibits activational responses (Fos
induction) to a systemic IL-1 challenge (Herkenham et al., 1998 ). In
addition to several indirect means by which circulating IL-1 could
influence ARH mechanisms, there is evidence to support the possibility
that it might access them directly. The medial part of the ARH, where
IL-1R1 is expressed, can bind certain peptides or proteins administered
intravenously (van Houten et al., 1980 , 1981 ), enjoys potential
physical links (by way of broad perivascular spaces) with an adjoining
circumventricular structure (median eminence), and displays a level of
capillary permeability that substantially exceeds that of nearby
parenchymal regions (Shaver et al., 1992 ). Moreover, the ARH houses
peptidergic cell types implicated strongly in the stimulatory and
inhibitory controls of food intake and energy balance (Elmquist et al.,
1999 ; Kalra et al., 1999 ) and is interconnected extensively with other hypothalamic cell groups thought to be important in this regard (Broberger et al., 1998 ; Elias et al., 1998b ). The present experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that the ARH mediates
IL-1-induced anorexia.
Portions of these data have been presented in abstract form (Reyes and
Sawchenko, 2000 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals and surgical procedures. Adult male Sprague
Dawley rats (250-300 gm at the start of experimentation) were housed
in a colony room on a 12 hr light/dark cycle (lights on at 6:00 A.M.), with ad libitum access to food (Harlan Teklad rodent chow
8604) and water except where otherwise noted. Ambient room temperature was 23°C. For intravenous administration of IL-1, animals were fitted
with indwelling jugular venous catheters under
ketamine-xylazine-acepromazine anesthesia. Catheters were filled with
sterile heparinized saline, with the internal catheter placed at the
atrium and exteriorized at an interscapular position. After surgery,
animals were allowed to recover for 7 d before any
experimentation, during which time they were handled daily. All
procedures were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use
Committee of the Salk Institute.
Cytokine administration. Recombinant rat interleukin-1 ,
generously provided by Dr. Ron Hart (Rutgers University), was used in
all experiments. The cytokine was stored at 70°C, and fresh aliquots were thawed before each experiment. The vehicle for IL-1 injection was 0.01% BSA, 0.01% ascorbic acid, 10 mM Tris-HCl, and 36 mM
sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Controls included the injection of
vehicle as well as injection of heat-inactivated IL-1 (70°C, 30 min),
which inactivates the cytokine, but would not affect endotoxin (Majde,
1993 ). Animals given heat-inactivated IL-1 were indistinguishable from
vehicle-injected animals, behaviorally and with respect to Fos induction.
Experimental procedures and analysis. To monitor induced
patterns of Fos expression, rats were injected at 9:00 A.M. with IL-1 (6 µg/kg) or vehicle, and perfused at a range of time points (30, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 240 min). For behavioral experiments, IL-1
or vehicle was administered intravenously to animals at 8:00 A.M., after a 20 hr fast. Deprivation-induced refeeding was used in
these studies to be able to anticipate the onset of feeding, a
consideration that is particularly important in view of the relatively
mild IL-1 challenge conditions we used. At 8:30 A.M., food was
presented to the animals, and food intake was measured manually to the
nearest 0.1 gm every hour for 4 hr, and at 6, 8, 12, and 24 hr. Data
were analyzed using ANOVA, with the Bonferonni correction for multiple
comparisons applied as warranted.
ARH lesions and knife cuts. Late-term pregnant female rats
were allowed to deliver normally, and litter sizes were culled to 8-10
pups. To produce ARH lesions, pups were injected with monosodium
glutamate (4 mg/gm, i.p.; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) or saline every other
day for the first 10 days postnatally (Meister et al., 1989 ). At 3 weeks of age, animals were separated from the mother and segregated on
the basis of treatment status (lesion versus control). At 8 weeks,
animals were implanted with a jugular catheter as described. A
within-subjects design was used in which all animals received both
saline and IL-1 injections, spaced 1 week apart, with the order
counterbalanced across conditions. A subset of animals (five lesioned,
two control) continued to have patent catheters 1 week after completion
of the behavioral experiments. These animals were given a second
injection of IL-1 (6 µg/kg) and killed 3 hr later to examine
patterns of Fos expression. A separate group of adult animals were
administered knife cuts designed to sever principal (vertically
directed) projections of the ARH. Cuts were produced in the horizontal
plane by first lowering an L-shaped wire knife on the midline ( 1.7 mm
from Bregma), with the 1-mm-long cutting arm directed caudally, to a
depth of 7.5 mm. The knife was rotated 360° and then removed. At this
time, animals were also implanted intra-abdominally with a telemeter (Minimitter, Bend, OR) for remote monitoring of body temperature and
activity. Receivers placed beneath the cage collected body temperature
data and monitored gross horizontal movement. Animals were allowed to
recover for 2 weeks, at which time intravenous catheters were
implanted. One week later, animals received the first of two
injections. Again, this study used a within-subjects design, with each
animal receiving both saline and IL-1 treatment, 1 week apart, in
counterbalanced order. One week after the second injection, a subset of
animals (six knife cut, four controls) were challenged with an
intraperitoneal injection of fenfluramine (2 mg/kg), and their food
intake monitored as above.
Tissue processing and histology. Animals were deeply
anesthetized with chloral hydrate (350 mg/kg, i.p.) and perfused via the ascending aorta with saline followed by ice-cold 4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1% borate buffer at pH 9.5. Brains were
postfixed for 16 hr and cryoprotected overnight in 10% sucrose in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. Six series of 30-µm-thick
frozen sections were cut using a sliding microtome, collected in cold
ethylene glycol-based cryoprotectant, and stored at 20°C until
histochemical processing.
Hybridization histochemistry. In situ hybridization was
performed using 35S-labeled sense and
antisense (control) cRNA probes labeled to similar specific activities.
The neuropeptide Y (NPY) probe detected a 287 bp segment of exon
2 (Larhammar et al., 1987 ), whereas the pro-opiomelanocortin
(POMC) probe detected a 500 bp segment from the middle of the
N-terminal portion of the peptide to the poly(A) tail (Chen et al.,
1983 ). Slides were digested with 0.1-10 µg/ml proteinase K for 30 min at 37°C. Probes were labeled to specific activities of 1-3 × 109 dpm/µg and applied to the slide
at concentrations of ~107 cpm/ml,
overnight at 56°C in a solution containing 50% formamide, 0.3 M NaCl, 10 mM Tris, 1 mM EDTA, 0.05% tRNA, 10 mM
dithiothreitol, 1× Denhardt's solution, and 10% dextran sulfate,
after which they were treated with 20 µg/ml of ribonuclease A for 30 min at 37°C and washed in 15 mM NaCl/1.5
mM sodium citrate with 50% formamide at 70°C.
Slides were then dehydrated and exposed to x-ray films ( -Max;
Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) for 18 hr. They were coated with Kodak
NTB-2 liquid emulsion and exposed at 4°C for 10-30 d, as determined
by the strength of signal on film. Slides were developed with Kodak
D-19 and fixed with Kodak rapid fixer.
Immunohistochemistry. Primary antisera included a rabbit
polyclonal antiserum directed against the N-terminal portion (amino acids 5-16) of a synthetic human Fos protein (used at 1:5000; Santa
Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA). Specific staining was blocked by
preincubation (overnight at 4°C) with 30 µM
of the synthetic immunogen. Also used were rabbit-derived polyclonal antisera directed against human glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP;
used at 1:2000; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), and -melanocyte-stimulating hormone ( -MSH; used at 1:2000; Immunonuclear Corporation,
Stillwater, MN). Endogenous peroxidase activity was neutralized by
treating tissue for 10 min with 0.3% hydrogen peroxide, followed by 8 min in 1% sodium borohydride to reduce free aldehydes. Cells were permeabilized with PBS-0.2% Triton X-100 and then placed for 1 hr in
PBS-4% normal blocking serum. Tissue was incubated with primary
antibody at empirically determined concentrations for 48 hr in PBS-2%
blocking serum. Localization was performed using a conventional
avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase method or through the use of
fluorochrome-conjugated antisera. For combined immuno- and
hybridization histochemistry experiments, slight modifications to the
protocol were required. Immunostaining was performed first with the
following adjustments: (1) nonimmune (blocking) sera, potential sources
of RNase contamination, were replaced with 2% BSA and 2% heparin
sulfate, and (2) nickel enhancement steps were eliminated from the
immunostaining protocol because the nickel-based reaction product does
not survive the hybridization steps.
Quantification. Differences in the relative abundance of Fos
were estimated by simple cell counting. Counts of stained neurons were
made in regularly spaced series of sections in cell groups of interest
defined on the basis of adjoining Nissl-stained sections.
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RESULTS |
IL-1-induced anorexia
Based on preliminary experiments, an intravenous dose of 6 µg/kg
recombinant rat IL-1 was found to provoke a reliable and moderately
robust suppression of food intake after a 20 hr fast. Repeated measures
ANOVA revealed a significant interaction between drug and time
(F(1,5) = 3.40; p < 0.02), with both main effects also reaching statistical significance.
Animals administered IL-1 ate significantly less than
vehicle-injected controls mainly during the first 2 hr after injection,
and secondarily during the latter phases of the monitoring period
(12-24 hr) (Fig. 1).

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Figure 1.
IL-1 suppression of deprivation-induced feeding.
Top, Mean ± SEM cumulative food intake over 24 hr
after intravenous administration of IL-1 (6 µg/kg) (open
squares, vehicle; filled squares,
IL-1-injected). Bottom, Food intake per time bin.
IL-1-induced suppression of food intake was manifest primarily during
the 2 hr immediately after injection. n = 4;
*differs significantly from vehicle-treated values,
p < 0.005.
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IL-1-sensitive ARH neurons
Immunohistochemical detection of Fos protein induction was used to
identify and characterize ARH neurons that exhibited sensitivity to a
behaviorally effective cytokine dose. Rats injected with 6 µg/kg rat
IL-1 displayed an orderly progression of Fos induction in brain
(peak at ~1-2 hr), whose overall pattern was similar to that
described previously (Ericsson et al., 1994 ). While not rivaling the
strength of activational responses seen in such major sites of
expression as the paraventricular, central amygdaloid, and lateral
parabrachial nuclei, the nucleus of the solitary tract and
ventrolateral medulla, a moderate number of Fos-positive neurons (38 ± 5 cells per section, bilaterally) was distributed
relatively uniformly throughout the ARH. Material from saline-injected
controls contained no more than three or four labeled cells per section through the ARH, and the majority of sections contained none (Fig. 2).

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Figure 2.
IL-1-induced Fos expression in the arcuate
nucleus. Left, IL-1-induced Fos-IR (brown
nuclei) was seen reliably in the arcuate nucleus and the
POMC-rich region laterally adjoining it (bottom).
Saline-injected animals (top) showed little to no Fos-IR
in the arcuate. Both photomicrographs, 45×. Center and
right, Chemical characterization of IL-1-responsive
neurons of the ARH. Polarized epifluorescence (top) and
higher magnification bright-field photomicrographs
(bottom) of the ARH, showing dual localization of Fos-IR
(brown nuclei) with POMC (center) or NPY
(right) mRNAs (aqua or black
grains). Substantial proportions of Fos-IR neurons displayed
positive hybridization signals for each transcript
(arrowheads), although cells labeled singly for either
marker were also apparent. Doubly-labeled cells are seen throughout the
longitudinal extent of the ARH but were most prominent rostrally. Rats
were killed 3 hr after intravenous injection of 6 µg/kg rat IL-1.
Magnifications: top, 35×; bottom, 220×.
AHA, Anterior hypothalamic area; fx,
fornix; me, median eminence; mp (pm),
medial parvocellular (posterior magnocellular) part of the
paraventricular nucleus; VMH, ventromedial
nucleus.
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Combined immuno- and hybridization histochemical methods were then used
to determine the extent to which IL-1-sensitive ARH neurons might
express key peptides implicated in the positive and negative control of
food intake and energy balance. Activated neurons expressing the POMC
transcript were evident at all time points investigated and relatively
uniformly throughout the rostrocaudal extent of this nucleus (Fig. 2).
Similarly, activated neurons expressing the NPY transcript were also
evident at all time points and throughout the extent of the nucleus. A
greater percentage of activated neurons expressed POMC mRNA (30 vs
23%; p < 0.002), and this pattern did not differ
significantly across the time points examined. Outside the arcuate
nucleus, activated cells expressing NPY mRNA were also evident in the
anterior hypothalamic nucleus, where the vast majority of the scattered
Fos-positive cells in this region were associated with positive
hybridization signals for NPY mRNA.
MSG lesion effects
Because IL-1-sensitive ARH neurons expressed both orexigenic and
anorexigenic neuropeptides, we evaluated the behavioral feeding response to IL-1 in animals bearing ARH lesions produced by neonatal MSG treatment. Consistent with previous reports on this preparation (Nemeroff et al., 1977 ), lesioned animals at the time of testing (10-12 weeks old) weighed slightly less, exhibited frankly stunted linear growth relative to control animals, and manifest an overt adiposity. Furthermore, examination of Nissl-stained series of sections
from MSG-treated rats revealed that all lesioned animals displayed
nearly complete optic nerve atrophy, as well as an enlarged third
ventricle, and a profound, but not complete, cell loss in the ARH (Fig.
3). No obvious differences in cellularity
were evident elsewhere in the brain, including circumventricular
organs. POMC- and NPY-expressing neurons were dramatically reduced, but
not fully eliminated, in MSG-treated rats. Whereas POMC-positive cells were virtually lacking from the arcuate nucleus of lesioned animals, the laterally contiguous POMC population that lies outside the borders
of this cell group was ostensibly unaffected (Fig. 3). Similarly,
although NPY mRNA signals were markedly attenuated in arcuate nuclei of
lesioned animals, some sparing of the most medial contingent of cells
exhibiting this phenotype was observed consistently (Fig. 3).
Extra-arcuate expression of NPY mRNA (e.g., in isocortex and
dorsomedial nucleus of the hypothalamus) was not affected by the
lesion.

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Figure 3.
Evaluation of MSG lesions. Sections through the
ARH of representative control (top) and MSG-lesioned
(bottom) animals. Left, Examination of
Nissl-stained material revealed substantial cell loss in the ARH of
MSG-lesioned animals, with the most substantial sparing seen in the
dorsomedial aspect of the nucleus. Middle, Dark-field
photomicrographs showing POMC mRNA expression. MSG lesions virtually
eliminated POMC cells from the ARH proper, although positively
hybridized neurons lateral to the ARH were spared.
Right, NPY mRNA expression in the ARH of lesioned
animals was markedly attenuated, but not abolished, with sparing seen
reliably in the ventromedial aspect of the nucleus. All
photomicrographs, 50×. me, Median eminence;
VMH, ventromedial nucleus; v3, third
ventricle.
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When tested as adults in a deprivation induced re-feeding paradigm,
control animals responded to IL-1 with the expected acute suppression
of food intake, consuming 64.6% of what they ate after a vehicle
injection during the initial 4 hr after injection (Fig. 4) (8.8 gm after saline injection vs 5.7 gm after IL-1). In contrast to expectation, however, lesioned animals
responded to IL-1 with an even more pronounced reduction of food
intake, eating only 48.8% of what they ate after a vehicle injection,
a difference that was significantly (25%) lower than the control
animals at the 4 hr post-injection time point (p < 0.05; 6.7 gm after saline injection vs 3.3 gm after IL-1). By 8 hr
after injection, and thereafter, values from lesioned and control
animals were indistinguishable from one another.

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Figure 4.
Accentuation of IL-1-induced feeding suppression
in MSG-lesioned rats. Mean ± SEM cumulative food intake of
control (open squares) and MSG-lesioned rats
(filled squares) after an injection of IL-1,
expressed as percentage of each animal's own response to vehicle
injection. MSG-lesioned animals (n = 10) displayed
a significantly greater suppression of feeding at 4 hr after injection
compared with control animals (n = 8). Beyond 8 hr,
lesioned animals' food intake did not differ reliably from control
values. *Differs significantly from vehicle-treated values,
p < 0.05.
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To gain insight into the manner in which MSG lesions may have affected
the response to IL-1 of a potentially relevant downstream target of ARH
projections, lesioned and control animals were administered another
intravenous injection of IL-1 3 hr before killing, and Fos expression
in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH) was evaluated.
As noted above, IL-1 injection typically results in a robust activation
of PVH neurons, and this activation was evident in nonlesioned control
animals. Visual inspection indicated that lesioned animals exhibited a
consistent, although somewhat variable, reduction in the number of
Fos-IR neurons in the PVH (Fig. 5), so
these were then counted and correlated with the amount of food eaten
per time bin after an injection of IL-1. The number of Fos-IR neurons
in the PVH was positively correlated with the amount of food eaten at 2 hr (r2 = 0.76;
p < 0.05, two-tailed test). Thus, animals that
displayed the most muted IL-1-stimulated Fos induction in the PVH
(i.e., MSG-lesioned rats) tended reliably to conform to those that
exhibited the most profound (i.e., most potentiated) suppression of
food intake. This relationship was only statistically reliable at the 2 hr time point.

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Figure 5.
Reduction of IL-1-induced Fos expression in
MSG-lesioned rats. Intravenous IL-1 induced robust Fos expression in
the paraventricular nucleus in a representative control animal
(A), concentrated in the medial parvocellular
region (mp). Sections from two ARH-lesioned animals
(B, C) illustrate the reduced Fos expression seen in
these animals, which ranged from an obvious attenuation
(B) to a nearly total elimination of the response
(C). Also apparent in the lesioned animals is the
enlargement of the third ventricle that was characteristic of
MSG-treated rats. Dashed line outlines the approximate
border of the paraventricular nucleus. All photomicrographs, 60×.
pm, Posterior magnocellular part (paraventricular
nucleus).
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Knife cut effects
Because MSG lesions led to overt physiological changes (i.e.,
adiposity), and their effect on cytokine-induced anorexia was relatively small and opposite in direction from what was expected, a
second ablation method was tested in a similar paradigm. This involved
placing knife cuts in the horizontal plane dorsal to the arcuate
nucleus, designed to sever major, vertically directed, projections
emanating from this cell group (Fig. 6).
Others (Bell et al., 2000 ) have reported significant weight gain after
similar lesions, although such an effect was not observed in our
animals (2 week weight gain: controls 46 gm, knife cut 37 gm, NS.). The placement of the knife cuts was evaluated after behavioral testing in
Nissl material and in sections stained for glial fibrillary acidic
protein to define the extent of the glial scar. Their effectiveness was
verified by the accumulation of immunoreactive -MSH in axons immediately proximal to the lesion site.

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Figure 6.
Evaluation of knife cuts. A,
Schematic drawing of a midsagittal section through the hypothalamus to
show the approximate extent and position of horizontal knife cuts
(red) designed to sever the vertically directed ARH
projections. Such transections are expected to compromise projections
from the ARH to such feeding-related targets as the paraventricular
nucleus (PVH) and lateral hypothalamic area
(LHA). B, Nissl-stained section through
the ARH region of a knife cut animal. Black arrows
indicate placement and extent of the cut, dorsal to the ARH and roughly
bisecting the ventromedial nucleus (VMH).
Magnification, 20×. C, Immunofluorescence localization
of glial fibrillary acidic protein- (GFAP; top) and
-MSH-IRs (bottom) reveals a glial scar at the site of
the lesion (top), with significant pile-up of
immunoreactive material in fibers on the side proximal to it
(bottom). Dashed lines schematically
indicate knife placement. Magnification, 60×.
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Deprivation-induced refeeding challenges were performed 14-21 d after
knife cut or sham surgery. Values from sham-operated controls
(n = 3) did not differ from those of an unoperated
control group (n = 3), and the two groups were combined
to increase statistical power. Compared with this pooled control group,
knife cut animals demonstrated an even more pronounced potentiation of
IL-1-induced anorexia than was observed in MSG-lesioned rats (Fig.
7). Two hours after an injection of IL-1,
knife cut animals ate only 24% of what they ate after a vehicle
injection (6.2 gm after saline injection vs 1.5 gm after IL-1),
compared with 59% in the controls (4.5 gm after saline injection vs
2.6 gm after IL-1), amounting to a 60% reduction
(p < 0.05). As was the case with MSG-lesioned animals, significant between-group differences were not observed beyond
8 hr after injection. To evaluate whether knife cuts might similarly
affect the anorexia induced by other means, lesioned (n = 6) and control (n = 4) animals were also challenged
with systemic fenfluramine (2 mg/kg, i.p.). The two groups responded similarly to this challenge, demonstrating a modest suppression of food
intake, evident primarily at 2 hr after injection, when control animals
exhibited a 68.5 ± 23% suppression of food intake, as compared
with a saline injection, whereas the lesioned group ate 60.4 ± 15% less food. At no time point did the two groups differ
significantly, and both groups returned to near normal levels of food
intake by 24 hr, at which time each had consumed 90% of what they ate
after a saline injection.

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Figure 7.
Knife cut effects on IL-1-induced appetite
suppression. Mean ± SEM cumulative food intake of knife cut
(filled squares) and control (open
squares) rats after intravenous injection of IL-1, expressed as
percentage of each animal's own response to vehicle injection. Animals
bearing an ARH knife cut (n = 9) displayed a
significantly potentiated suppression of feeding at 2 hr after
injection compared with control animals (n = 6).
Beyond 8 hr, their food intake scores did not differ reliably from
those of controls. *Differs significantly from control values,
p < 0.05.
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To determine whether the knife cut effect was specific to this
particular manifestation of sickness behavior, activity levels and core
body temperature were monitored telemetrically in lesioned and
sham-operated animals. Both groups evinced comparable acute increases
in body temperature (0.8-1.0°C at 2-3 hr after injection) in
response to injection of IL-1, a well known pyrogen (Fig.
8). Although both groups also exhibited a
tendency toward decreased activity during the ~6 hr immediately after
an IL-1 challenge (average 25% reduction in activity levels), there
was no reliable difference in activity levels at any time point.

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Figure 8.
Temperature and activity measurements in knife cut
animals. Intra-abdominally implanted telemeters were used to monitor
core body temperature (top) and gross activity
(bottom) in sham (open squares) and knife
cut (filled squares) animals. Shaded
areas represent the mean ± 1 SD of pooled baseline values
from sham and knife cut animals. Both groups mounted similar febrile
responses to an injection of IL-1 given at 10:00 A.M.
(arrow). The trends toward a mild hypoactivity exhibited
by both groups after IL-1 injection were not statistically reliable.
*Differs significantly from baseline values, p < 0.01.
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DISCUSSION |
Previous studies and present findings localizing IL-1 sensitivity
to ARH populations implicated in the control of energy balance provided
a basis for hypothesizing a role for this cell group in the mediation
of cytokine-induced anorexia. The results of experiments using
independent means of disrupting arcuate outputs failed to support this
view, revealing instead an exaggeration of IL-1-induced feeding
suppression in lesioned animals. The results support an involvement of
the ARH in IL-1-induced anorexia, but not a mediating role. Instead,
the net output of the nucleus appears normally to restrain the
cytokine-induced reduction in food intake.
IL-1-sensitive arcuate neurons
The present study provides the first phenotypic characterization
of IL-1-responsive ARH neurons, localizing Fos induction to both NPY-
and POMC-expressing populations; activation of each was evident as
early as 30 min after injection and persisted through at least 4 hr.
Although these phenotypes accounted for a majority (~70%) of
activated neurons in this cell group, it should be emphasized that
these populations coexpress other neuroactive agents, including agouti-related protein (AgRP; with NPY; Broberger et al., 1998 ), and
cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART; with POMC; Elias
et al., 1998a ), which may be relevant to the observed behavioral
effects. Arcuate neurons issue extensive projections within the
hypothalamus, prominently targeting the PVH, as well as additional
areas potentially involved in feeding and energy balance, such as the
dorsomedial and ventromedial nuclei and the lateral hypothalamic area
(Sawchenko, 1998 ). Additional studies using retrograde tracing methods
will be required to identify downstream targets of IL-1-sensitive
arcuate neurons.
MSG lesions
Neonatal monosodium glutamate treatment has been used extensively
to generate arcuate nucleus lesions without involving local axons-of-passage. Our lesioned animals demonstrated a characteristic pattern of cell loss (Meister et al., 1989 ), which included a marked,
although incomplete, destruction of POMC- and NPY-expressing cells.
Additionally, potentially relevant cells displaying these phenotypes
were found in hypothalamic areas unaffected by MSG treatment. These
included an NPY population in the anterior hypothalamic area and POMC
neurons lateral to the ARH proper, both of which displayed substantial
IL-1 sensitivity. Extra-arcuate POMC neurons may project in a manner
somewhat distinct from those within the nucleus, proper (Khachaturian
et al., 1986 ), and have been suggested as being more important in the
control of food intake than the medial contingent (Bergen et al.,
1998 ). It remains to be determined what, if any, role either population
may play in cytokine-induced anorexia. When tested as adults,
MSG-lesioned animals demonstrated a mildly potentiated anorexia in
response to IL-1, eating significantly less immediately after the
challenge, with the effect persisting for somewhat longer than in
controls. Although unexpected, and arguing against the hypothesized
nature of ARH involvement in cytokine anorexia, this result is
consistent with work describing exaggerated febrile and somnogenic
responses to IL-1 (Martin et al., 1990 ; Opp et al., 1990 ), although it
must be noted that in these studies the cytokine was administered centrally.
Also unexpected were MSG lesion effects on IL-1-induced activational
responses in the PVH. Lesioned animals displayed substantial reductions
in IL-1-induced Fos expression, whose magnitude was positively related
to lesion effects on behavioral responses. While the significance of
this relationship is unclear, it is interesting to note this positive
correlation with food intake was observed only at the earliest time
point (2 hr), when cytokine effects on behavior are most pronounced
(Fig. 1). This relationship was surprising in light of evidence
implicating an alternate source of PVH afferents, medullary
catecholamine neurons, in mediating IL-1-stimulated activational
responses (Ericsson et al., 1994 ; Buller et al., 2001 ). The PVH houses
multiple visceromotor cell types, including parvocellular
neurosecretory neurons that express corticotropin-releasing factor for
the control of pituitary-adrenal responses to stress (Sawchenko et
al., 2000 ), and has been implicated as a site of action for multiple
orexigenic and anorexigenic peptides (Abbott et al., 2001 ; C. Wang et
al., 2001 ). It remains to be determined whether our findings may
generalize to other indices (secretory, biosynthetic) of PVH function,
and whether any role for arcuate nucleus afferents in such responses
may be mediating or permissive.
Disruption of arcuate projections
Knife cuts were used as a second means of disrupting ARH outputs,
to test the validity of conclusions suggested by the MSG lesion data.
These fiber transections were placed dorsal to the ARH in the
horizontal plane, intended to sever projections (including POMC- and
NPY-containing ones) that course through the periventricular region
toward the PVH and other targets (Baker and Herkenham, 1995 ).
Projections that exit the nucleus laterally would presumably be spared.
Such knife cuts reduced the -MSH and NPY inputs to the PVH, but did
not eliminate them. Behaviorally, these animals also exhibited a
potentiation of IL-1-induced anorexia, manifest particularly during the
first 1-2 hr after injection, which was substantially more robust than
that seen in MSG-lesioned rats. This effect exhibited some specificity
to food intake, because IL-1 effects on body temperature were
comparable in knife cut and control animals and appeared specific to
the nature of the challenge, because fenfluramine-induced anorexia was
not reliably affected. Collectively, these data suggest that ablation
of either arcuate neurons or their outputs results in accentuated IL-1
induced anorexia. A potential link between obesity and exaggerated
cytokine responsiveness has been suggested, because genetically obese
Zucker rats have been found to display exaggerated anorectic and
febrile responses to centrally administered IL-1 (Plata-Salaman et al., 1997 , 1998 ). This is unlikely to explain the present results, because
only the MSG-treated animals manifested a significant adiposity, yet it
was the knife cut group that showed the most marked behavioral
potentiation. Furthermore, it is difficult to directly compare these
studies because they differed in the route of cytokine administration,
and in our paradigm, anorexia and fever did not respond similarly.
Mechanisms of cytokine-induced anorexia
IL-1 reduces food intake at doses within the pathophysiologic
range (Sonti et al., 1996a ), and is recognized, along with tumor necrosis factor- (Langhans and Hrupka, 1999 ; Bluthe et al., 2000 ), as a principal mediator of anorexia provoked by complex immune challenges such as endotoxin. Previous work has established that IL-1-induced feeding suppression is mediated by IL-1R1 within the brain
(Kent et al., 1992 ; Laye et al., 2000 ). As with other centrally driven
acute phase responses, considerations of dose, route of administration,
and nature of the immune challenge are critical in evaluating potential
mechanisms and sites of action underlying anorexic effects. We used a
moderate dose of intravenous IL-1 as a model of systemic infection,
potentially allowing for the cytokine to influence ARH mechanisms by
any one of a number of indirect mechanisms (see below), or by accessing
directly cognate receptors in the ARH. Although the ARH lacks the
fenestrated capillaries that characterize bona fide circumventricular
organs, both morphological and functional evidence exists to support an
ability of circulating proteins to access the ARH (van Houten et al.,
1980 , 1981 ; Shaver et al., 1992 ). Such a capacity for IL-1,
specifically, has not been demonstrated. Alternate means of activating
these neurons might involve the local release of IL-1 from
vascular-associated cells (Angelov et al., 1998 ; Zhang et al., 2000 ).
Similarly, prostaglandins are a prime candidate for fulfilling such a
role, although their importance in sickness-related anorexia remains
controversial (Shimizu et al., 1991 ; Shimomura et al., 1992 ; McCarthy,
1999 ; W. Wang et al., 2001 ). Systemic cytokines can also access the brain by way of peripheral nerves, notably the vagus (Kurosawa et al.,
1997 ). However, as with prostaglandins, the involvement of the vagus in
sickness anorexia appears to depend on the strength and nature of the
immune insult, and, particularly, the route of administration. Vagal
mechanisms have been most prominently implicated in central responses
to agents administered into the peritoneum (Bret-Dibat et al., 1995 ;
Laviano et al., 1995 ; Sergeev and Akmaev, 2000 ; Konsman and Dantzer,
2001 ).
Studies of the specific brain regions and mediators that may be
involved in IL-1-induced anorexia have been limited. Support for a role
of resident ARH mechanisms in sickness-associated anorexia may be found
in the observation that central administration of a nonselective
melanocortin MC3/4 receptor antagonist disrupts the anorexic, but not
the pyrogenic, actions of both IL-1 (Lawrence and Rothwell, 2001 ) and
LPS (Huang et al., 1999 ). The same treatment has recently been shown
capable of overcoming cancer cachexia (Wisse et al., 2001 ).
Interestingly, NPY or AgRP, orexigenic peptides coexpressed in arcuate
neurons, can also reverse the undereating exhibited by immune
challenged and/or tumor-bearing animals (Sonti et al., 1996b ; Marks et
al., 2001 ). The perspective provided by such manipulations of
individual neurochemical systems is not easily reconciled with that
deriving from our more general disruption of the arcuate nucleus or its
outputs, as our manipulations affected both POMC and NPY/AgRP cells or
their projections. One possible explanation for our findings of
enhanced anorexia might involve lesion-induced disruption of the
balance between competing actions of ligands for MC4 receptors.
Although both ablations appeared to affect the intrinsic POMC and
NPY/AgRP populations comparably, the sparing of the laterally disposed,
extra-arcuate POMC population, which also demonstrated IL-1
sensitivity, may provide for sufficient MC4 activation to accentuate
the undereating, especially under conditions of reduced antagonism by
AgRP. Support for this idea may be found in the recent observation that
MC4 knock-out mice are resistant to both LPS- and tumor-associated
anorexia (Marks et al., 2001 ). Recent evidence suggests a
complex interplay between intrinsic POMC and NPY systems within the
arcuate nucleus (Cowley et al., 2001 ) and that the nature of its
connections with feeding-related hypothalamic cell groups is
substantially bidirectional (Horvath et al., 1999 ). We view our
findings in this context, and as arguing against the notion that food
intake or related physiologic functions can be predicted simply on the
basis of the balance between the activities of resident POMC- and
NPY-expressing output neurons. Teasing apart this functional circuitry
will require manipulations that are both phenotypically and spatially
more selective.
The circuitry and transduction mechanisms that underlie
cytokine-induced anorexia remain to be identified. Candidates for such
a role might include circumventricular structures like the area
postrema, which expresses IL-1R1 (Ericsson et al., 1995 ) and has access
to circuitry related to energy balance (Cunningham et al., 1994 ), or
cells associated with the cerebral vasculature at several levels of the
neuroaxis, which appear capable of engaging proximate afferent
projections to the hypothalamus through the release of local signaling
molecules, mainly prostaglandins (Scammell et al., 1996 ; Ericsson et
al., 1997 ). Collectively, our data fail to support the hypothesized
mediating role of arcuate nucleus mechanisms in IL-1-induced feeding
suppression. Instead, it would appear that the net output of this cell
group serves normally to limit or to antagonize this response.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 7, 2002; revised March 19, 2002; accepted April 2, 2002.
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health
Grant NS-21182 and was conducted in part by the Foundation for Medical Research. P.E.S. is an investigator of the Foundation for
Medical Research. T.M.R. is the recipient of National Research Service
Award support (DK-10135). We thank Carlos Arias and Kris Trulock for
excellent technical and photographic expertise, respectively.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Paul E. Sawchenko, Laboratory
of Neuronal Structure and Function, The Salk Institute, 10010 North
Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037. E-mail: sawchenko{at}salk.edu.
 |
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Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22125091-09$05.00/0
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