A study has found that liver plays a major role in regulating the body weight by communicating with the brain to control the amount of food we consume.

Test on mice showed that over-expression of a specific enzyme in the liver resulted in 50percent less fat and the subjects ate less food than mice without the extra enzyme.
Needed in the production of glucose, the enzyme called FBPase previously led to speculation that too much FBPase was bad for you.
"We actually thought that the mouse with the over-expressed enzyme would show signs of becoming diabetic since the enzyme is important in producing more glucose from the liver. However when we studied our mice in more depth, we were very surprised to see that this enzyme triggered a number of hormones that influence the control of appetite," said Dr Barbara Fam from the University's Molecular Obesity Laboratory group at Austin Health.
Dr Fam conducted the study with Associate Professor Sof Andrikopoulos.
"The really striking result was that the genes in the brain, important in making us increase our food intake were actually reduced," she noted .
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"When people eat diets loaded with fat and sugars particularly over the long term, it can have a number of different effects on the body but it appears that we actually have in place an innate system that protects us from any further weight gain that could happen while eating these type of diets," she added.
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The study will be published in the Journal "Diabetes".
Source-ANI