Are you born with Obesity?
(Daily
Health News)
The
brain circuitry that controls appetite might be wired differently in some
people, and that could predispose them to obesity, California researchers
suggest.
The
study was conducted in rats, not humans, and yet it could ultimately lead to
novel obesity treatments, said Philip Smith, director of the Office of Obesity
Research at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases.
"It
is not just about drugs that modify short-term appetite," he said,
"there may be drugs that stimulate development of the appropriate neural
pathways. So, it is an exciting, but very early, time in this field."
The
study was published in the February issue of Cell Metabolism.
Sebastien
Bouret, an assistant professor of neuroscience at the University of Southern
California, and his colleagues examined neural circuits emanating from the
appetite, hunger and body-weight control center of the brain -- the so-called
arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARH) -- in a series of rats bred to be
either prone to, or resistant to, obesity.
The
team found fewer neural connections projecting from the ARH in obesity-prone
animals than in their leaner counterparts. Surprisingly, Bouret
said, this deficiency developed very early in life, before the animals became
obese, and appeared to extend into adulthood.
"Somehow,
these animals are programmed to become obese," Bouret
said. "The obesity is hard-wired into the brain."
When
the researchers then looked at why the brains of obese rats differed from their
normal-weight counterparts, they found that the neurons from obesity-prone
animals were less responsive to leptin, a hormone
that controls the development of these circuits, and which also signals the
body's energy status and controls metabolic rate.
"This
paper presumes to say, these animals must be leptin-resistant,
and that is why the pathways are not developing," said Smith.
But
that doesn't mean they are doomed to a life of severe obesity, said Dr. Barbara
Kahn, chief of the Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism at Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center, in Boston. How they live their lives also
matters.
"It
is important not to 'blame' the obese person or imply that he/she is
responsible for being obese," Kahn noted. "Having said that,
reasonable, healthy caloric restriction and a safe and sustainable program of
physical activity can help limit weight gain and often bring about some degree
of weight loss. In addition, healthy eating and regular exercise can reduce the
complications of obesity such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular
disease."
At
the same time, she added, not everyone can wear a size 4.
"There
is a certain aspect of genetics that sets somebody in a certain range of
possible body weights, and then how that person lives his or her life will
determine whether they are at the bottom or top of the range," she
explained.
Human
obesity has both genetic and environmental roots. The rats used in this study,
like most humans, developed obesity when fed a high-energy diet. On a normal
diet, they were heavier than normal rats, but not yet obese.
"This
is quite an exciting paper," said Smith, "because it links more
closely to human behavior than most rodent models we have seen."
The
findings also suggest a possible therapeutic approach to combating human
obesity. If drugs could be designed to influence the formation of neural
circuits during development and targeted to at-risk pregnancies, Smith said,
"there is a good likelihood we could have
successful interventions that improve the health of the mother, and which have
a major impact on disease risk for the infant, during pregnancy."
A
related study from Boston University researchers in the same journal found that
bulking up muscle mass can lead to a general metabolic improvement in obese
individuals. "Interventions designed to increase skeletal muscle mass in
at-risk human populations may prove to be critical weapons in the fight against
obesity and obesity-related comorbidities, including
diabetes, heart disease, stroke, hypertension and cancer," an accompanying
editorial stated.
More
information
For
more on obesity, visit the National Institute of Diabetes
and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
First time Published:
02/05/08