An Indian-origin scientist gives an answer to the most sought after question, Why it is so frustratingly difficult to stick to a diet?
An Indian-origin scientist gives an answer to the most sought after question of obese dieters, "Why it is so frustratingly difficult to stick to a diet?" When we don't eat, hunger-inducing neurons in the brain start eating bits of themselves. That act of self-cannibalism turns up a hunger signal to prompt eating, according to Rajat Singh of Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
"A pathway that is really important for every cell to turn over components in a kind of housekeeping process is also required to regulate appetite," said Singh.
The cellular process uncovered in neurons of the brain's hypothalamus is known as autophagy (literally self-eating.)
Singh says the new findings in mice suggest that treatments aimed at blocking autophagy may prove useful as hunger-fighting weapons in the war against obesity.
The new evidence shows that lipids within the so-called agouti-related peptide (AgRP) neurons are mobilized following autophagy, generating free fatty acids.
Those fatty acids in turn boost levels of AgRP, itself a hunger signal.
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The study was reported in the August issue of the Cell Press journal Cell Metabolism.
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