Efavirenz Interacts with Hormones Involved in Appetite and Satiety, Affecting Body Weight in Mice
Sandra Angélica Rojas-Osornio, Leticia Manuel-Apolinar, Minerva Crespo-Ramírez, Vladimir Paredes-Cervantes, Antonio Mata-Marín, José Molina-López, Miguel Pérez de la Mora, Dasiel Borroto-Escuela, Ricardo Martínez-Lara, Emiliano Tesoro-Cruz

TL;DR
Efavirenz, an antiretroviral drug, affects appetite and body weight in mice by altering hormone levels and brain signals related to hunger and satiety.
Contribution
This study is the first to explore how efavirenz impacts the hunger–satiety circuit in mice, revealing its effects on appetite-related hormones and brain receptors.
Findings
Efavirenz increased ghrelin and hypothalamic receptor expression, leading to higher appetite and sucrose preference in mice.
Despite increased food intake, efavirenz-treated mice showed reduced body weight and elevated triglyceride and cholesterol levels.
Leptin and satiety-related markers indicated that hunger was not due to a lack of satiety signals in treated mice.
Abstract
Antiretroviral drugs are associated with increased body weight and metabolic disorders. Fat gain and insulin resistance are commonly associated with abdominal obesity in people with HIV (PWH). There is currently an open ongoing discussion about how antiretroviral therapy affects body weight and its significance in hunger–satiety circuit alteration. Until now, the impact of the drug on this circuit has not been explored. This study aimed to assess the hormones involved in appetite and satiety regulation in the serum and hypothalamus after efavirenz (EFV) administration in mice. EFV (10 mg/kg) and distilled water (1.5 μL/kg) (control group) were orally administered for 36 days to CD1 mice. Body weight and food intake were determined throughout treatment. At the end of the treatment, the metabolic profile (glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol) was assessed, and leptin, soluble receptor of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV-related health complications and treatments · Regulation of Appetite and Obesity · Pharmacology and Obesity Treatment
