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Sensory Nerve and Neuropeptide Diversity in Adipose Tissues.

Molecules and Cells 2024 Februrary 15
Both brown and white adipose tissues (BAT/WAT) are innervated by the peripheral nervous system (PNS), including efferent sympathetic nerves that communicate from the brain/central nervous system (CNS) out to the tissue, and afferent sensory nerves that communicate from the tissue back to the brain and locally release neuropeptides to the tissue upon stimulation. This bi-directional neural communication is important for energy balance and metabolic control, as well as maintaining adipose tissue health through processes like browning (development of metabolically-healthy brown adipocytes in WAT), thermogenesis, lipolysis, and adipogenesis. Decades of sensory nerve denervation studies have demonstrated the particular importance of adipose sensory nerves for BAT and WAT functions, but far less is known about the tissue's sensory innervation compared to the better-studied sympathetic nerves and their neurotransmitter norepinephrine. In this review, we cover what is known and not yet known about sensory nerve activities in adipose, focusing on their effector neuropeptides actions in the tissue.

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