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Volume 1 Issue 2, February 2019

Maintaining mature melanocortin neurons

Hypothalamic melanocortin neurons control energy homeostasis by modulating appetite. Here the authors reveal a role of the transcription factor Tbx3 as a regulator of the peptidergic identity and function of immature and mature mouse melanocortin neurons.

See Quarta et al.

Image: Alexandre Fisette. Cover Design: Sam Whitham.

News & Views

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    • Iannis E. Adamopoulos
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  • Hypothalamic neuronal diversity is at the core of whole-body energy-homeostasis control, but the molecular mechanisms governing neuronal neuropeptide specification remain incompletely understood. A new study in Nature Metabolism adds a relevant piece to the puzzle of how key hypothalamic neuronal populations maintain their peptidergic identity throughout the lifespan.

    • Arnaud Obri
    • Marc Claret
    News & Views
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Reviews

  • Like stem cells, cancer cells can rapidly proliferate but, unlike stem cells, they are mostly locked into a malignant identity. Here, Finley and Intlekofer highlight commonalities in anabolic pathways that support proliferation in cancer and stem cells, and point out unique metabolic features that influence self-renewal and differentiation.

    • Andrew M. Intlekofer
    • Lydia W. S. Finley
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  • Adipose tissue responds to a variety of hormonal and environmental cues with changes in size, cellular composition and metabolic activity. Here Kajimura and Chouchani review our current understanding of adipocyte metabolism in physiology and metabolic disease, and they discuss strategies to reprogram adipocyte fate and metabolism.

    • Edward T. Chouchani
    • Shingo Kajimura
    Review Article
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