Ghrelin is a peptide hormone playing a crucial role in food intake control. Differently from other hormones contributing to energy homeostasis, usually exerting their regulating action by signaling satiety (e.g. leptin), ghrelin is known to stimulate appetite and, in general, to increase animals' motivation to seek out food and initiate feeding. Medical and experimental literature has shown that approximately 70-80% of ghrelin production occurs in the stomach, whilst the great part of ghrelin control, leading to ghrelin suppression soon after a meal administration, is exerted by signals originated in the small intestine. This note proposes a mathematical model for ghrelin dynamics, focusing the attention on its short-term 24 hours dynamics. The proposed model conforms to the established physiology by introducing a minimal multi-compartmental structure of the gastrointestinal tract. Model parameters are set in order to fit plasma ghrelin concentration data taken from the literature, related to an experiment on humans: simulation-based ghrelin predictions provide promising results if compared to real data. Besides to offer a proper description of the short-term ghrelin dynamics, the model can be thought of as a module of a bigger multi-compartmental structure, aiming to account for the "web of hormones" (including, e.g., leptin and insulin) related to food intake and energy homeostasis.
Guerra Pires, J., Borri, A., De Gaetano, A., Manes, C., Palumbo, P. (2017). A short-term dynamical model for ghrelin. In The 20th World Congress of the International Federation of Automatic Control, Toulouse France, 9-14 luglio 2017 (pp.11011-11016). RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS : Elsevier B.V. [10.1016/j.ifacol.2017.08.2480].
A short-term dynamical model for ghrelin
Palumbo, Pasquale
Ultimo
2017
Abstract
Ghrelin is a peptide hormone playing a crucial role in food intake control. Differently from other hormones contributing to energy homeostasis, usually exerting their regulating action by signaling satiety (e.g. leptin), ghrelin is known to stimulate appetite and, in general, to increase animals' motivation to seek out food and initiate feeding. Medical and experimental literature has shown that approximately 70-80% of ghrelin production occurs in the stomach, whilst the great part of ghrelin control, leading to ghrelin suppression soon after a meal administration, is exerted by signals originated in the small intestine. This note proposes a mathematical model for ghrelin dynamics, focusing the attention on its short-term 24 hours dynamics. The proposed model conforms to the established physiology by introducing a minimal multi-compartmental structure of the gastrointestinal tract. Model parameters are set in order to fit plasma ghrelin concentration data taken from the literature, related to an experiment on humans: simulation-based ghrelin predictions provide promising results if compared to real data. Besides to offer a proper description of the short-term ghrelin dynamics, the model can be thought of as a module of a bigger multi-compartmental structure, aiming to account for the "web of hormones" (including, e.g., leptin and insulin) related to food intake and energy homeostasis.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
IFAC_Ghrelin_v8.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: Versione post-print completa del lavoro
Tipologia di allegato:
Author’s Accepted Manuscript, AAM (Post-print)
Dimensione
354.63 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
354.63 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.