Cross-talk between leptin, ghrelin and orexins in the central nervous system of seasonal animals – a review
Article Category: Review
Published Online: Apr 28, 2017
Page range: 337 - 350
Received: Jun 14, 2016
Accepted: Oct 24, 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/aoas-2016-0070
Keywords
© by Katarzyna Kirsz
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
The maintenance of energy homeostasis is achieved with ‘detectors’ that receive signals from the external and internal environment and with multidirectional ‘communication routes’ including neuronal networks and body fluids, such as blood and cerebrospinal fluid. Changes in the energy demands of organisms are caused by current physiological status and environmental conditions, including season and food availability. Little is known about the interactions between the metabolic indicators involved in the maintenance of energy homeostasis, e.g., leptin, orexins and ghrelin. Sheep and other seasonal animals are highly adaptable to their environments because of the plasticity of their neural and endocrine systems. Sheep exhibit leptin resistance and are thus an extremely interesting model for research on the relationship between hormonal indicators of energy metabolism. The paper is focused mainly on the anatomical and functional communication between leptin, ghrelin and orexins, which play principal roles in the adaptation of energetic demands to environmental fluctuations.