J R Soc Med 2002;95:227-230
doi:10.1258/jrsm.95.5.227
© 2002 Royal Society of Medicine
The hypocretin/orexin system
I O Ebrahim MRCPsych
R S Howard MD FRCP 1
M D Kopelman PhD FRCPsych
M K Sharief MD 1
A J Williams FRCP 2
Department of Psychiatry, Lane Fox Unit, St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth
Palace Road, London SE1 7EH, UK
1 Department of Neurology, Lane Fox Unit, St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth Palace
Road, London SE1 7EH, UK
2 Sleep Disorders Centre, Lane Fox Unit, St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth Palace
Road, London SE1 7EH, UK
Correspondence to: Dr A J Williams E-mail:
adrian.williams{at}gstt.sthames.nhs.uk
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INTRODUCTION
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The hypocretins (orexins) are recently described hypothalamic
neuropeptides
thought to have an important role in the regulation
of sleep and arousal
states
1. Their
discovery was reported independently
by two groups using different techniques.
de Lecea
et
al.
2 identified
the
pro-hormone pre-prohypocretin, and its peptide products hypocretin-1
(Hcrt-1)
and hypocretin-2 (Hcrt-2), by nucleotide sequencing. The discovery
of
the orexins, orexin-A (Orx-A) and orexin-B (Orx-B), was reported
almost
simultaneously by Sakurai
et
al.
3 who used
the technique
of orphan receptor cloning. The terms orexin and hypocretin
are
synonymous and in this article we will use hypocretin (Hcrt).
The finding that
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of these peptides
were abnormal in patients
with narcolepsy has stimulated research
on the potential role of these
peptides in human disease. We
present here an overview of the pertinent
findings from animal
studies and a review of the published data from human
studies,
with a particular emphasis on narcolepsy. Finally, we consider
the
possible roles of these peptides in neurological and psychiatric
disorders.
 |
BACKGROUND
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Identification of the peptides
In 1996, a set of neuropeptides related to the hormone secretin
were
isolated from the rat lateral hypothalamus by the process
of directional tag
PCR subtraction
cloning
4. The
cloning of
the gene for these peptides from rat and mouse, the localization
of
the peptide-producing cell bodies and a description of some
of their efferent
projections were first presented in
1977
5,6.
The receptors
The receptors for these neuropeptides (Hcrtr1 [Orxr1] and Hcrtr2 [Orxr2])
have been identified as G-protein coupled receptors and shown in the rat
brain, by analysis of their mRNA, to display a striking
distribution7,8.
The Hcrtr1 receptor has a much higher (100 to 1000-fold) affinity for Hcrt-1
than for Hcrt-2. The Hcrtr2 receptor seems to have equal affinities for both
neuropeptides. The distinctive distribution of the receptors has led some
authors to hypothesize a sleep-specific role for the Hcrtr1 receptor and a
more general role for Hcrtr2 receptor. The receptors have been mapped on human
chromosome 1p33 and 6cen,
respectively5,7,8,9.
Projections of the hypocretin system
The hypocretin-producing cell bodies are specific to the hypothalamus and
have widespread anatomical projections within the central nervous system of
the rat with the densest extra-hypothalamic projection to the noradrenergic
locus coeruleus (LC) and lesser projections to the basal ganglia, thalamic
regions, the medullary reticular formation, and the nucleus of the solitary
tract. There are minor projections to the cortical regions, central and
anterior amygdaloid nuclei, and the olfactory
bulb4,10,11.
In humans, the localization of hypocretin-producing cell bodies is restricted
to the dorso-lateral hypothalamus with extensive dense projections to the
locus coeruleus (LC), dorsal raphe nuclei, amygdala, suprachiasmatic nucleus,
basal forebrain, cholinergic
brainstem12,13
and spinal cord (Figure
1)14.

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Figure 1. Projections of the hypocretin (orexin) system (A), to cholinergic
neurons, reticular formation and spinal cord; (B), to thalamus and basal
ganglia; (C), to basal forebrain; (D), to amygdala and dopaminergic neurons
including suprachiasmatic nucleus; (E), to locus coeruleus.
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Neurochemical actions of the hypocretins
The hypocretins are thought to act primarily as excitatory
neurotransmitters1,2,7.
Systemic and intracerebroventricular administration of hypocretins directly
stimulates cells on the LC noradrenergic system in rats and monkeys,
suggesting a role for the hypocretins in various central nervous functions
related to noradrenergic innervation, including vigilance, attention,
learning, and
memory15. Their
actions on serotonin, histamine, acetylcholine and dopamine neurotransmission
is also thought to be excitatory and a facilitatory role on gamma-aminobutyric
acid (GABA) and glutamate-mediated neurotransmission is
suggested16,17.
In particular, intravenous administration of Hcrt-1 in rats produces a
differential release of GABA and glutamate in the hypocretin-dense amygdala
compared with the cerebellum, suggesting that modulation of these
neuro-transmitters is dependent on hypocretin
innervation18.
Functions of hypocretin
Apart from their primary role in the control of sleep and
arousal1,7,
the hypocretins have been implicated in multiple functions including feeding
and energy
regulation3,16,19,20,21,
neuroendocrine
regulation17,22,
gastrointestinal23
and cardiovascular
system24 control,
the regulation of water balance, and the modulation of
pain1. A role in
behaviour is also
postulated25. The
cell bodies responsible for hypocretin synthesis are localized to the tuberal
part of the hypothalamus, the so-called feeding centre. The observation that
Hcrt-1 increases metabolic rate and the demonstration that insulin-induced
hypoglycaemia activates up to one-third of hypocretin containing
neurons21 has led
to the suggestion that the hypocretins are mediators of energy
metabolism26. The
neuroendocrine effects of the hypocretins include a lowering of plasma
prolactin and growth hormone and an increase in the levels of corticotropin
and cortisol, insulin and luteinizing
hormone1,16,17.
Central administration of the hypocretins increases water consumption,
stimulates gastric acid secretion and increases gut
motility1,23.
The hypocretins increase mean arterial blood pressure and heart
rate7. The
localization of long descending axonal projections containing hypocretin at
all levels of the spinal
cord14 suggests a
role in the modulation of sensation and pain. Strong innervation of the caudal
region of the sacral cord suggests a role in the regulation of both
sympathetic and parasympathetic functions.
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HYPOCRETIN IN NARCOLEPSY
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Narcolepsy is a primary disorder of alertness with an estimated
prevalence
of 0.03-0.05%. It may develop at any age but peak
onset is in adolescence with
a secondary peak in the fourth
decade. The presenting symptom is usually
excessive daytime
sleepiness, with irresistible sleep attacks during the day.
Other
symptoms of this syndrome are cataplexy (brief episodes of muscle
weakness
or paralysis precipitated by strong emotion, such as laughter
or
surprise), sleep paralysis, which is a symptom due to the
persistence of
rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep atonia on waking,
and hypnogogic hallucinations
or dream-like images, which characteristically
occur at sleep onset. Short
periods of automatic behaviour may
also occur, a reflection of brief
intrusions of sleep (micro-sleeps)
into the drowsy
state
28.
Animal studies
In 1999, Lin et
al.29
demonstrated a mutation in the hypocretin receptor 2 gene in canine
narcolepsy. The subsequent finding that mice lacking hypocretin receptors show
behavioural arrests similar to symptoms of narcolepsy-cataplexyi.e.
direct transitions from wakefulness to REM sleep, gait disturbance preceding
and rocking activity during behavioural arrest
episodes30,31led
to a recognition of the potential importance of the hypocretins in sleep,
arousal and activation. The animal models of narcolepsy show some variability
in the defect causing the narcolepsy-like syndrome. In the mouse model,
disruption of both types of hypocretin receptor pathways, Hcrtr1 and Hcrtr2,
is necessary to produce the narcoleptic
findings30,31,32,33
whereas in the canine model of narcolepsy the predominant defect is at the
Hcrtr-2 receptor29.
Intravenous administration of Hcrt-1 to narcoleptic dogs (dobermans) reduces
cataplexy and normalizes their sleep and waking
durations34.
Hypocretin in cerebrospinal fluid
There have been several studies of hypocretin in human CSF. The published
work to date has tested for the presence of Hcrt-1 only and not Hcrt-2. CSF
hcrt-1 levels in healthy adults are within a narrow range (250-280
pg/mL)35. A recent
study indicated no significant difference in hypocretin levels with respect to
gender or age, and concluded that very low or undetectable CSF hypocretin
concentrations are an abnormal finding at any
age36.
The initial study by Nishino et
al.35 found
that 7 of 9 patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy had undetectable levels of
hypocretin in their CSF. Of the 2 patients with detectable hypocretin, one was
within the control range and the other had raised levels. Both these patients
were indistinguishable from the other patients with narcolepsy. The authors
suggested that these patients might have a hypocretin receptor defect rather
than a hypocretin production deficiency. Ripley et
al.37 have
reported undetectable levels of hypocretin in the CSF from 32 of 36 patients
tested. In the remaining 4 the hypocretin levels were below the control
range.
There have been two studies examining hypocretin cells post mortem in the
brains of patients with
narcolepsy12,13.
Both found a striking reduction, to about 10% of the normal number of
hypocretin neurons, in narcoleptic brains. In the initial
study12 there was
cell loss without gliosis or signs of inflammation. However, in the other
study13 there was
evidence of gliosis in the hypocretin cell region, implying that a
degenerative process was the cause of hypocretin cell loss in narcolepsy.
Further support for the degenerative hypothesis is their finding of a higher
number of astrocytes in the hypothalamus of narcoleptic patients than in
controls. The absence of hypocretin neurons can be explained by mechanisms
including neurodegeneration, failure of development, reduction in synthesis or
release of hypocretins or some mutation in the DNA sequence coding for
hypocretin (though only 1 out of the 74 narcoleptic patients screened showed a
mutation12).
 |
HYPOCRETIN IN NEUROLOGICAL AND PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS
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The role of hypocretin in other neurological illnesses is yet
to be
established. A recent
study
38 found that
CSF hypocretin
levels did not differ significantly between two groups, one
with
neuroimmunological disease and the other with non-neuroimmunological
disease,
and normal controls. In a subgroup analysis the investigators
found
that 4 of 10 patients with GuillainBarré
syndrome had
significantly lower Hcrt-1 levels than the controls.
Another
study
37 has
demonstrated low CSF hypocretin levels in
patients with subarachnoid
haemorrhage, acoustic schwannoma
and head traumaperhaps explained by
damage to and/or
dysfunction of the hypothalamus.
The dense hypocretin projections to the noradrenergic, serotonin,
dopaminergic, cholinergic, and GABA/glutamate areas of the brain suggest a
possible role in psychiatric and neuropsychiatric
disorders39,40.
The hypocretin system may be important in affective disorders such as major
depression and bipolar affective disorder. The monoamine hypothesis (biogenic
amine hypothesis) of depression suggests that dysfunctional or deficient
neurotransmission of noradrenaline and/or serotonin underlies the symptoms of
depression41,42,43.
More recently, emphasis has shifted to the possible roles of neuropeptides in
the aetiology and treatment of
depression44,45,46,47,48,49.
Involvement of the hypocretin system in depression is suggested on
neuroanatomical and pharmacological grounds. The only substance known to
innervate all the relevant areas of the brain implicated in the neurobiology
of depression is hypocretin and the excitatory innervation of the LC and
dorsal raphe region, the stimulation of dopamine and acetylcholine and the
prohistaminergic actions all point to an antidepressant effect. These
therapeutic possibilities remain to be clarified by appropriate studies.
 |
CONCLUSION
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There is strong evidence that narcolepsy is associated with
abnormalities
of the hypocretin neurotransmitter system. Low
or undetectable levels of
hypocretin are found in most patients
but some have normal or raised levels.
Thus it has been suggested
that there are two variants of narcolepsy. In most
patients
there seems to be a hypocretin deficiency but there may also
be a
form with hypocretin resistance due to abnormal
hypocretin
receptor/post-receptor dynamics leading to overproduction
of
hypocretin
9,50.
There may be involvement of the hypocretin/orexin
system in other disorders of
sleep such as primary hypersomnolence,
insomnia, and the Kleine-Levin
syndrome
10, and a
potential role
in sleep disorders affecting the ageing
population
7,28,41,51,52.
The
role of these peptides in other neurological and psychiatric
disorders
remains putative.
 |
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J R Soc Med,
January 12, 2002;
95(12):
591 - 597.
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