Neural and behavioral effects of a novel Mu opioid receptor antagonist in binge-eating obese people
Neural and behavioral effects of a novel Mu opioid receptor antagonist in binge-eating obese people
Background: Binge eating is associated with obesity and has been conceptualized as food addiction. However, this view has received only inconsistent support in humans, and limited evidence relates key neurocircuitry to the disorder. Moreover, relatively few studies have used pharmacologic functional magnetic resonance imaging to probe the underlying basis of altered eating behaviors. Methods: In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study, we explored the effects of a potent mu-opioid receptor antagonist, GSK1521498, in obese individuals with moderate binge eating. Subjects were tested during a baseline placebo run-in period and retested after 28-days of drug (n = 21) or placebo (n = 21) treatment. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and behavioral measures, we determined the drug's effects on brain responses to food images and, separately, on motivation to expend energy to view comparable images. Results: Compared with placebo, GSK1521498 was associated with a significant reduction in pallidum/putamen responses to pictures of high-calorie food and a reduction in motivation to view images of high-calorie food. Intriguingly, although motivational responding was reduced, subjective liking for the same images actually increased following drug treatment. Conclusions: Stimulus-specific putamen/pallidal responses in obese people with binge eating are sensitive to altered mu-opioid function. This neuromodulation was accompanied by reductions in motivational responding, as measured by grip force, although subjective liking responses to the same stimuli actually increased. As well as providing evidence for a link between the opioid system and food-related behavior in binge-eating obese individuals, these results support a dissociation across measures of motivation and liking associated with food-related stimuli in these individuals.
Binge eating, fMRI, hedonics, motivation, obesity, opioid
887-894
Cambridge, Victoria C.
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Ziauddeen, Hisham
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Nathan, Pradeep J.
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Subramaniam, Naresh
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Dodds, Chris
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Chamberlain, Samuel R.
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Koch, Annelize
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Maltby, Kay
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Skeggs, Andrew L.
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Napolitano, Antonella
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Farooqi, I. Sadaf
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Bullmore, Edward T.
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Fletcher, Paul C.
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1 May 2013
Cambridge, Victoria C.
d35822b1-92e2-4c4c-b9ed-ce29735e8b16
Ziauddeen, Hisham
1aa1d008-7ae8-4439-9f3d-3fbe63a40b2f
Nathan, Pradeep J.
8862816e-472e-49b4-9c74-c89faffd7f10
Subramaniam, Naresh
d9247fc9-2709-480e-b4d6-629e39ca70aa
Dodds, Chris
40f9ec16-f5e4-47f5-ad97-163c4b1cb590
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Koch, Annelize
beb80449-f721-4846-b36e-a1fb482012c6
Maltby, Kay
153e0d1e-6117-4490-8cb1-54b0d3afe68e
Skeggs, Andrew L.
71ee326f-990f-4042-992b-578f72f326ea
Napolitano, Antonella
acbf2c6d-bea2-4e7c-9008-19206d7bb1e9
Farooqi, I. Sadaf
bbf76ddf-08af-4f56-99f9-213057e51605
Bullmore, Edward T.
6e0f28a8-a70c-4391-a4f4-1172cdb6fd6b
Fletcher, Paul C.
71236681-892c-484d-81d8-60a750383af0
Cambridge, Victoria C., Ziauddeen, Hisham, Nathan, Pradeep J., Subramaniam, Naresh, Dodds, Chris, Chamberlain, Samuel R., Koch, Annelize, Maltby, Kay, Skeggs, Andrew L., Napolitano, Antonella, Farooqi, I. Sadaf, Bullmore, Edward T. and Fletcher, Paul C.
(2013)
Neural and behavioral effects of a novel Mu opioid receptor antagonist in binge-eating obese people.
Biological Psychiatry, 73 (9), .
(doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.10.022).
Abstract
Background: Binge eating is associated with obesity and has been conceptualized as food addiction. However, this view has received only inconsistent support in humans, and limited evidence relates key neurocircuitry to the disorder. Moreover, relatively few studies have used pharmacologic functional magnetic resonance imaging to probe the underlying basis of altered eating behaviors. Methods: In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study, we explored the effects of a potent mu-opioid receptor antagonist, GSK1521498, in obese individuals with moderate binge eating. Subjects were tested during a baseline placebo run-in period and retested after 28-days of drug (n = 21) or placebo (n = 21) treatment. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and behavioral measures, we determined the drug's effects on brain responses to food images and, separately, on motivation to expend energy to view comparable images. Results: Compared with placebo, GSK1521498 was associated with a significant reduction in pallidum/putamen responses to pictures of high-calorie food and a reduction in motivation to view images of high-calorie food. Intriguingly, although motivational responding was reduced, subjective liking for the same images actually increased following drug treatment. Conclusions: Stimulus-specific putamen/pallidal responses in obese people with binge eating are sensitive to altered mu-opioid function. This neuromodulation was accompanied by reductions in motivational responding, as measured by grip force, although subjective liking responses to the same stimuli actually increased. As well as providing evidence for a link between the opioid system and food-related behavior in binge-eating obese individuals, these results support a dissociation across measures of motivation and liking associated with food-related stimuli in these individuals.
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Published date: 1 May 2013
Keywords:
Binge eating, fMRI, hedonics, motivation, obesity, opioid
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Local EPrints ID: 493111
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493111
ISSN: 0006-3223
PURE UUID: 67f6bb76-0a5e-42b6-be28-cccc1f767465
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Date deposited: 22 Aug 2024 17:21
Last modified: 23 Aug 2024 02:00
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Author:
Victoria C. Cambridge
Author:
Hisham Ziauddeen
Author:
Pradeep J. Nathan
Author:
Naresh Subramaniam
Author:
Chris Dodds
Author:
Samuel R. Chamberlain
Author:
Annelize Koch
Author:
Kay Maltby
Author:
Andrew L. Skeggs
Author:
Antonella Napolitano
Author:
I. Sadaf Farooqi
Author:
Edward T. Bullmore
Author:
Paul C. Fletcher
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