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Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass and Caloric Restriction but Not Gut Hormone-Based Treatments Profoundly Impact the Hypothalamic Transcriptome in Obese Rats.

Nutrients · 2021

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of obese rats, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery and calorie restriction significantly altered gene activity in the hypothalamus—a brain region that controls hunger and energy—while treatments with gut hormones PYY3-36, liraglutide, or both did not. Rats given RYGB or restricted calories lost similar amounts of weight, but only those groups showed increased activity in pathways linked to leptin signaling and energy regulation. The hormone-based treatments did not produce these changes.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNutrients, 2021
Citations9
Relative citation ratio0.66
NIH percentile37
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The hypothalamus is an important brain region for the regulation of energy balance. Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery and gut hormone-based treatments are known to reduce body weight, but their effects on hypothalamic gene expression and signaling pathways are poorly studied. METHODS: Diet-induced obese male Wistar rats were randomized into the following groups: RYGB, sham operation, sham + body weight-matched (BWM) to the RYGB group, osmotic minipump delivering PYY3-36 (0.1 mg/kg/day), liraglutide s.c. (0.4 mg/kg/day), PYY3-36 + liraglutide, and saline. All groups (except BWM) were kept on a free choice of high- and low-fat diets. Four weeks after interventions, hypothalami were collected for RNA sequencing. RESULTS: While rats in the RYGB, BWM, and PYY3-36 + liraglutide groups had comparable reductions in body weight, only RYGB and BWM treatment had a major impact on hypothalamic gene expression. In these groups, hypothalamic leptin receptor expression as well as the JAK-STAT, PI3K-Akt, and AMPK signaling pathways were upregulated. No significant changes could be detected in PYY3-36 + liraglutide-, liraglutide-, and PYY-treated groups. CONCLUSIONS: Despite causing similar body weight changes compared to RYGB and BWM, PYY3-36 + liraglutide treatment does not impact hypothalamic gene expression. Whether this striking difference is favorable or unfavorable to metabolic health in the long term requires further investigation.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35010991 ↗