New study reveals the brain’s role in amplifying hunger signals during dieting and the hidden factor behind it.
Yo-yo effect is a well-known pattern of weight cycling for people who have been on diets. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research and Harvard Medical School have now shown in mice that communication in the brain changes during a diet: The nerve cells that mediate the feeling of hunger receive stronger signals so that the mice eat significantly more after the diet and gain weight more quickly.
‘Many people who have dieted are familiar with the yo-yo effect: after the diet, the kilos are quickly put back on. New study sheds light on how the brain amplifies hunger signals.’
In the long term, these findings could help develop drugs to prevent this amplification and help to maintain reduced body weight after dieting. "People have looked mainly at the short-term effects after dieting. We wanted to see what changes in the brain in the long term," explains Henning Fenselau, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research, who led the study.
To this end, the researchers put mice on a diet and assessed which circuits in the brain changed. In particular, they examined a group of neurons in the hypothalamus, the AgRP neurons, which are known to control the feeling of hunger.
They were able to show that the neuronal pathways that stimulate AgRP neurons sent increased signals when the mice were on a diet. This profound change in the brain could be detected for a long time after the diet.
Preventing the Yo-Yo Effect
The researchers also succeeded in selectively inhibiting the neural pathways in mice that activate AgRP neurons.Advertisement
“This work increases understanding of how neural wiring diagrams control hunger. We had previously uncovered a key set of upstream neurons that physically synapse onto and excite AgRP hunger neurons. In our present study, we find that the physical neurotransmitter connection between these two neurons, in a process called synaptic plasticity, greatly increases with dieting and weight loss, and this leads to long-lasting excessive hunger”, comments co-author Bradford Lowell from Harvard Medical School.
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