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Greg+S.B.+Suh
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KAIST Shows That the Brain Can Distinguish Glucose: Clues to Treat Obesity and Diabetes
<(From left)Prof. Greg S.B Suh, Dr. Jieun Kim, Dr. Shinhye Kim, Researcher Wongyo Jeong) “How does our brain distinguish glucose from the many nutrients absorbed in the gut?” Starting with this question, a KAIST research team has demonstrated that the brain can selectively recognize specific nutrients—particularly glucose—beyond simply detecting total calorie content. This study is expected to offer a new paradigm for appetite control and the treatment of metabolic diseases. On the 9th, KAIST (President Kwang Hyung Lee) announced that Professor Greg S.B. Suh’s team in the Department of Biological Sciences, in collaboration with Professor Young-Gyun Park’s team (BarNeuro), Professor Seung-Hee Lee’s team (Department of Biological Sciences), and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, had identified the existence of a gut-brain circuit that allows animals in a hungry state to selectively detect and prefer glucose in the gut. Organisms derive energy from various nutrients including sugars, proteins, and fats. Previous studies have shown that total caloric information in the gut suppresses hunger neurons in the hypothalamus to regulate appetite. However, the existence of a gut-brain circuit that specifically responds to glucose and corresponding brain cells had not been demonstrated until now. In this study, the team successfully identified a “gut-brain circuit” that senses glucose—essential for brain function—and regulates food intake behavior for required nutrients. They further proved, for the first time, that this circuit responds within seconds to not only hunger or external stimuli but also to specific caloric nutrients directly introduced into the small intestine, particularly D-glucose, through the activity of “CRF neurons*” in the brain’s hypothalamus. *CRF neurons: These neurons secrete corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) in the hypothalamus and are central to the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the body’s core physiological system for responding to stress. CRF neurons are known to regulate neuroendocrine balance in response to stress stimuli. Using optogenetics to precisely track neural activity in real time, the researchers injected various nutrients—D-glucose, L-glucose, amino acids, and fats—directly into the small intestines of mice and observed the results. They discovered that among the CRF neurons located in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN)* of the hypothalamus, only those specific to D-glucose showed selective responses. These neurons did not respond—or showed inverse reactions—to other sugars or to proteins and fats. This is the first demonstration that single neurons in the brain can guide nutrient-specific responses depending on gut nutrient influx. *PVN (Paraventricular Nucleus): A key nucleus within the hypothalamus responsible for maintaining bodily homeostasis. The team also revealed that glucose-sensing signals in the small intestine are transmitted via the spinal cord to the dorsolateral parabrachial nucleus (PBNdl) of the brain, and from there to CRF neurons in the PVN. In contrast, signals for amino acids and fats are transmitted to the brain through the vagus nerve, a different pathway. In optogenetic inhibition experiments, suppressing CRF neurons in fasting mice eliminated their preference for glucose, proving that this circuit is essential for glucose-specific nutrient preference. This study was inspired by Professor Suh’s earlier research at NYU using fruit flies, where he identified “DH44 neurons” that selectively detect glucose and sugar in the gut. Based on the hypothesis that hypothalamic neurons in mammals would show similar functional responses to glucose, the current study was launched. To test this hypothesis, Dr. Jineun Kim (KAIST Ph.D. graduate, now at Caltech) demonstrated during her doctoral research that hungry mice preferred glucose among various intragastrically infused nutrients and that CRF neurons exhibited rapid and specific responses. Along with Wongyo Jung (KAIST B.S. graduate, now Ph.D. student at Caltech), they modeled and experimentally confirmed the critical role of CRF neurons. Dr. Shinhye Kim, through collaboration, revealed that specific spinal neurons play a key role in conveying intestinal nutrient information to the brain. Dr. Jineun Kim and Dr. Shinhye Kim said, “This study started from a simple but fundamental question—‘How does the brain distinguish glucose from various nutrients absorbed in the gut?’ We have shown that spinal-based gut-brain circuits play a central role in energy metabolism and homeostasis by transmitting specific gut nutrient signals to the brain.” Professor Suh added, “By identifying a gut-brain pathway specialized for glucose, this research offers a new therapeutic target for metabolic diseases such as obesity and diabetes. Our future research will explore similar circuits for sensing other essential nutrients like amino acids and fats and their interaction mechanisms.” Ph.D. student Jineun Kim, Dr. Shinhye Kim, and student Wongyo Jung (co-first authors) contributed to this study, which was published online in the international journal Neuron on June 20, 2025. ※ Paper Title: Encoding the glucose identity by discrete hypothalamic neurons via the gut-brain axis ※ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2025.05.024 This study was supported by the Samsung Science & Technology Foundation, the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) Leader Research Program, the POSCO Cheongam Science Fellowship, the Asan Foundation Biomedical Science Scholarship, the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), and the KAIST KAIX program.
2025.07.09
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