Thierry Alquier
Neurobiologie de l'obésité
- Professeur titulaire
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Faculté de médecine - Département de médecine
Media
Fondateur et membre du comité scientifique de Bêtagenex
© Université de Montréal
Profile
Research expertise
Excessive consumption of nutrients with high caloric density is in part responsible for the epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) in Western countries. Excessive caloric intake and obesity negatively affect intermediary metabolism, insulin secretion, and insulin action in peripheral and central insulin-sensitive tissues (e.g. fat, muscle, liver and central nervous system) which in turn, at least in genetically predisposed individuals, leads to T2D. In the central nervous system, it is now well established that the hypothalamus is a crucial integrative center for the control of energy homeostasis. The hypothalamus controls food intake as well as the metabolic and endocrine activity of several peripheral tissues (e.g. liver, pancreas, adipose tissues and muscle) via the autonomic nervous system. Our laboratory is interested by the role of the hypothalamo-pancreatic axis in the pathogenesis of T2D. We are investigating the mechanisms leading to impaired sensing of nutrients in neurons of the hypothalamus in response to fuel surfeit and their involvement in the nervous control of beta cell biology and plasticity, insulin secretion and sensitivity. We are also interested in the neural adaptations that may occur in the hypothalamus in response to fuel surfeit and how they could contribute to the development of T2D.
Biography
Thierry Alquier received his graduate training in Cellular Biology and Physiology at Université Paul Sabatier in Toulouse (France) under the mentorship of Dr Luc Pénicaud. His PhD thesis investigated the role of insulin and the insulin-sensitive glucose transporter GLUT4 in the central nervous system on the neural control of glucose homeostasis. As an American Diabetes Association and Fondation Bettencourt Schueller-funded postdoctoral fellow, he joined the laboratory of Dr Barbara Kahn at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston to pursue training in hypothalamic control of energy metabolism and neuroendocrinology. There, his work identified the role of the hypothalamic AMP-activated protein Kinase (AMPK) in nutrient-sensing mechanisms and in food intake regulation. Dr Alquier pursued his training in Montréal as a Canadian Diabetes Association postdoctoral fellow to study nutrient-sensing mechanisms in the pancreatic ß-cell in the laboratory of Dr Vincent Poitout where he investigated the role of the fatty acid receptor GPR40 in the control of ß-cell function and insulin secretion. In 2009, Dr Alquier became a member of the Montreal Diabetes Research Center and was appointed Assistant Professor at the Departement of Medecine and Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Departement of Pathology & Cellular Biology in the Faculty of Medicine at Université de Montréal. Dr Alquier’s laboratory is located at the Technopôle Angus research site of the Centre de Recherche du CHUM.
education
- 2009 — Études postdoctorales, Endocrinologie et diabète de type 2 (2006-2009) — Endocrinologie — UdM-CRCHUM
- 2006 — Études postdoctorales, Neuroendocrinologie et obésité (2003-2006) — Endocrinologie, Neurosciences — Harvard Medical School-BIDMC
- 2002 — Doctorat (PhD), Physiopathologie — Neurosciences, Physiologie — Université Paul Sabatier III
Affiliations and responsabilities
Research affiliations
Research units
Membre
- CRCHUM — Centre de recherche du Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal
- CMDO — Réseau de recherche en santé cardiométabolique, diabète et obésité
- Centre De Recherche Du Diabète De Montréal
- Responsable de l'axe Cardiométabolique du CRCHUM
- Comité exécutif du réseau de recherche en santé Cardiométabolique, Obésité et Diabète (CMDO) du FRQS
Affiliated institutions
- Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM)
Teaching and supervision
Student supervision
Theses and dissertation supervision (Papyrus Institutional Repository)
Comportements anxiodépressifs et motivation alimentaire en contexte d'obésité : impacts des acides gras saturés sur le noyau accumbens
Cycle : Doctoral
Grade : Ph. D.
Métabolisme astrocytaire des acides gras et gliotransmission dans l’hypothalamus : deux fonctions de l’Acyl-CoA Binding Protein impliquées dans le contrôle de l’homéostasie énergétique.
Cycle : Doctoral
Grade : Ph. D.
Impact des acides gras alimentaires sur le système dopaminergique mésolimbique : effets différentiels des acides gras saturés et mono-insaturés
Cycle : Doctoral
Grade : Ph. D.
Caractérisation et régulation du métabolisme des acides gras dans l’hypothalamus
Cycle : Doctoral
Grade : Ph. D.
Projects
Research projects
Central control of energy homeostasis by neuronal adipose triglyceride lipase
Supplément COVID-19 CRSNG_Role of PEDF/ATGL signalling in the central control of energy homeostasis
Rôle des endozépines dans le contrôle hypothalamique de la balance énergétique
A novel role for pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF)/adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) signaling in the hypothalamic control of energy balance
Programme de dépannage CRCHUM
ROLE OF THE HYPOTHALAMO-PANCREATIC AXIS IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF TYPE 2 DIABETES
ROLE DE LA PROTEINE DE LIAISON AUX ACYL-COA (ACBP) DANS LA SECRETION D'INSULINE ET L'HOMEOSTASIE GLUCIDIQUE
CENTRAL LIPID SIGNALLING AND REGULATION OF ENERGY BALANCE
CENTRAL LIPID SIGNALLING AND REGULATION OF ENERGY BALANCE
ROLE DE L'AXE HYPOTHALAMO-PANCREATIQUE DANS LA PATHOGENIE DU DIABETE DE TYPE 2
ROLE DE L'AXE HYPOTHALAMO-PANCREATIQUE DANS LA PATHOGENIE DU DIABETE DE TYPE 2
Outreach
Publications and presentations
Disciplines
- Neurosciences
- Physiology
Areas of expertise
- Neuronal and Synaptic Activity
- Neuronal Communication and Neurotransmission
- Diabetes
- Glucotoxicity
- Metabolic Diseases
- Energy Metabolism
- Neurotoxicity
- Obesity
- Pancreas
- Physiology
- Receptors and Carriers
- Cell Signaling (Neurosciences)