Cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) is a recently discovered anorexigenic peptide. In rodents, CART inhibits food intake and is expressed in the anorexigenic α-MSH- but not in the orexigenic neuropeptide Y (NPY)- and agouti-related protein (AGRP)-synthesizing neurons of the arcuate nucleus. To understand whether CART is similarly expressed in feeding-related neuronal groups of the human hypothalamus as observed in rodents, colocalization of CART with α-MSH, NPY, AGRP, and melanin-concentrating hormone was studied using double-labeling immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy on human hypothalamic tissues obtained at autopsy. Unlike in rodents, we observed that CART is absent from the perikarya and axons of α-MSH-synthesizing neurons, but expressed in approximately one third of NPY/AGRP neurons in the human infundibular nucleus. In the lateral hypothalamus of the humans, colocalization of CART and melanin-concentrating hormone was observed, similar to that described in rodents. The anatomy of CART-containing neurons in the human infundibular nucleus differs markedly from that observed in the rodent brain, raising the question whether the colocalization of CART with orexigenic NPY and AGRP neurons is associated with an orexigenic role of CART in the human brain.

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