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Sci Tech
How hunger signals work in the brain
Obesity apparently triggers a mechanism that prevents signals to stop eating from getting to the brain.
OBESE PEOPLE are not getting critical chemical signals to their brains that tell them to stop eating, findings from Saint Louis University suggest. The review of research was published in the journal Current Pharmaceutical Design.
Normally, a protein called leptin is released from fat cells and hitches a ride across the blood vessels that feed the brain, known as the `blood-brain barrier.' The protein then is in the right place to tell the brain that the body has had enough to eat, to eat less or to burn calories faster.
However, among those who are obese, the brain doesn't seem to be getting the message. This could be because the blood-brain barrier doesn't properly transport the leptin or because the brain isn't interpreting the signals properly.
William A. Banks, professor of geriatrics at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine, speculates that people gain fat to increase the amount of leptin needed to push through the communications bottleneck.
"The research is significant as its suggests a new way that the brain and the body communicate about body weight. Obesity is the result when that communication falters," he says. Banks says problems with transporting leptin to the brain lead to a vicious cycle.
Obesity apparently triggers a mechanism that prevents signals to stop eating from getting to the brain, which leads to more obesity. And as obesity increases, the likelihood decreases of the signals getting through.
``The problem with communicating across the blood-brain barrier comes with increasing obesity and increasing obesity makes it more difficult for the brain and body to communicate about weight. Our research found that fat mice get fatter as they age and skinny ones stay about the same,'' he says.
Animals are not born with communications signals blocked between the body and brain. The problem develops with time, Banks says. ``Maybe some environmental factor or substance from within the body triggers this. Substances such as epinephrine can stimulate transporting leptin into the brain.
Conversely, there might be substances that impair transporting leptin.
If we could identify them, we could develop a new treatment for obesity based on blocking the substances that prevent leptin from getting into the brain.''
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