What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating

Eating behaviors are governed by the complex interplay between homeostatic mechanisms, driven by metabolic needs, and hedonic pathways, supporting the rewarding aspects of food consumption. This review explores the role of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs) in modulating both hedonic and homeost...

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Main Authors: Maria Italia, Diego Scheggia, Monica DiLuca, Fabrizio Gardoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-07-01
Series:Pharmacological Research
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1043661825002464
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author Maria Italia
Diego Scheggia
Monica DiLuca
Fabrizio Gardoni
author_facet Maria Italia
Diego Scheggia
Monica DiLuca
Fabrizio Gardoni
author_sort Maria Italia
collection DOAJ
description Eating behaviors are governed by the complex interplay between homeostatic mechanisms, driven by metabolic needs, and hedonic pathways, supporting the rewarding aspects of food consumption. This review explores the role of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs) in modulating both hedonic and homeostatic feeding, highlighting their contributions to reward sensitivity and metabolic regulation in specific neuronal circuitries and their putative role in eating disorders. In the nucleus accumbens, calcium-permeable AMPARs (Cp-AMPARs) mediate synaptic adaptations that enhance reward-seeking behavior under food restriction and after exposure to palatable diets. These molecular mechanisms resemble those observed in substance addiction, highlighting shared pathways between maladaptive eating and addictive behaviors. In hypothalamic circuits, AMPARs dynamically adjust synaptic composition in response to metabolic hormones, such as leptin and ghrelin, to maintain energy homeostasis, underscoring their role in fine-tuning hunger and satiety. Interestingly, peripheral metabolic signals and dietary states can modulate hippocampal synaptic plasticity through AMPAR-dependent mechanisms, thereby affecting meal-related memory formation and retrieval. Overall, these findings indicate the involvement of AMPAR in food-seeking behavior and, consequently, their potential role in eating disorders. However, despite the therapeutic potential of targeting AMPARs, available pharmacological strategies remain very limited. Preclinical data highlights new possible approaches, such as the development of AMPAR-allosteric and subunit-specific agents, yet challenges related to off-target effects in chronic treatments persist. By integrating insights into the neuroplastic mechanisms underlying feeding behaviors, this review lays the groundwork for advancing compounds targeting AMPARs for the therapy of metabolic and eating disorders.
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spelling doaj-art-8a3ee3b5ce474211ac7e047cbdc257ef2025-08-20T02:35:44ZengElsevierPharmacological Research1096-11862025-07-0121710782110.1016/j.phrs.2025.107821What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eatingMaria Italia0Diego Scheggia1Monica DiLuca2Fabrizio Gardoni3Department of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences “Rodolfo Paoletti”, University of Milan, Milan 20133, ItalyDepartment of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences “Rodolfo Paoletti”, University of Milan, Milan 20133, ItalyDepartment of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences “Rodolfo Paoletti”, University of Milan, Milan 20133, ItalyCorresponding author.; Department of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences “Rodolfo Paoletti”, University of Milan, Milan 20133, ItalyEating behaviors are governed by the complex interplay between homeostatic mechanisms, driven by metabolic needs, and hedonic pathways, supporting the rewarding aspects of food consumption. This review explores the role of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs) in modulating both hedonic and homeostatic feeding, highlighting their contributions to reward sensitivity and metabolic regulation in specific neuronal circuitries and their putative role in eating disorders. In the nucleus accumbens, calcium-permeable AMPARs (Cp-AMPARs) mediate synaptic adaptations that enhance reward-seeking behavior under food restriction and after exposure to palatable diets. These molecular mechanisms resemble those observed in substance addiction, highlighting shared pathways between maladaptive eating and addictive behaviors. In hypothalamic circuits, AMPARs dynamically adjust synaptic composition in response to metabolic hormones, such as leptin and ghrelin, to maintain energy homeostasis, underscoring their role in fine-tuning hunger and satiety. Interestingly, peripheral metabolic signals and dietary states can modulate hippocampal synaptic plasticity through AMPAR-dependent mechanisms, thereby affecting meal-related memory formation and retrieval. Overall, these findings indicate the involvement of AMPAR in food-seeking behavior and, consequently, their potential role in eating disorders. However, despite the therapeutic potential of targeting AMPARs, available pharmacological strategies remain very limited. Preclinical data highlights new possible approaches, such as the development of AMPAR-allosteric and subunit-specific agents, yet challenges related to off-target effects in chronic treatments persist. By integrating insights into the neuroplastic mechanisms underlying feeding behaviors, this review lays the groundwork for advancing compounds targeting AMPARs for the therapy of metabolic and eating disorders.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1043661825002464AMPA receptorHedonicHomeostaticFoodObesitySynaptic plasticity
spellingShingle Maria Italia
Diego Scheggia
Monica DiLuca
Fabrizio Gardoni
What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
Pharmacological Research
AMPA receptor
Hedonic
Homeostatic
Food
Obesity
Synaptic plasticity
title What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
title_full What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
title_fullStr What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
title_full_unstemmed What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
title_short What's in your plate?AMPA receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
title_sort what s in your plate ampa receptors modulation at the crossroads of homeostatic and hedonic eating
topic AMPA receptor
Hedonic
Homeostatic
Food
Obesity
Synaptic plasticity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1043661825002464
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