A Spotlight on Appetite

Neuron
Lisa R Beutler, Zachary A Knight

Abstract

Remarkably few hormones have been identified that stimulate appetite. The recent discovery of asprosin, a hormone that activates AgRP neurons to increase food intake and body weight, begins to fill this gap (Duerrschmid et al., 2017; Romere et al., 2016).

Citations

Jul 25, 2019·Current Opinion in Psychiatry·Janet Treasure, Laura Eid
May 20, 2020·Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry·Halil İbrahim Ceylan, Özcan Saygın
Feb 7, 2020·Eating and Weight Disorders : EWD·Yanran HuJue Chen
Mar 22, 2020·Diabetes·Jennifer G HoffmannAtul R Chopra
Jan 17, 2021·Molecular Metabolism·Ruth HanssenMarc Tittgemeyer
Mar 6, 2021·Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry·Munevver Gizem HekimMete Ozcan
Dec 10, 2019·Current Opinion in Neurobiology·Daniel MünchCarlos Ribeiro
Jun 19, 2019·Hormone Research in Pædiatrics·Wenjun LongXiaoping Luo
Jan 6, 2022·Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology·Sibel OzcanMete Ozcan

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Brain developing: Influences & Outcomes

This feed focuses on influences that affect the developing brain including genetics, fetal development, prenatal care, and gene-environment interactions. Here is the latest research in this field.

Asprosin

Asprosin is a fasting-induced hormone produced in the white adipose tissue to stimulate the hepatic release of glucose into the bloodstream. Discover the latest research on this protein hormone here.

Related Papers

Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine
S AouY Oomura
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
R I Henkin
Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine
H Shimizu
© 2022 Meta ULC. All rights reserved