Image Credit : http://news.discovery.com/
A new study has revealed that the voices inside people's
head that tells them to eat or stop eating are actually a cluster of about
10,000 specialised brain cells. The international team of scientists has found
tiny triggers inside those cells that give rise to this voice, and keep it
speaking throughout life.
The new research, done in fish and mice, can't yet be
applied to humans who eat too much or too little. But it revealed how tiny bits
of DNA can have a big influence on how the body regulates appetite and weight.
It's the first documentation of exactly how a brain cell gene involved in
weight regulation was controlled.
The team reports their discoveries on genetic factors key to
the brain cells, or neurons, called POMC cells.
Located deep inside the brain, in a structure called the
hypothalamus, the cluster of POMC neurons act as a control center for feelings
of fullness or hunger. They take in signals from the body, and send out
chemical signals to regulate appetite and eating.
When POMC neurons are absent, or not working correctly,
animals and humans grow dangerously obese. Now, the new findings show in
animals that the same thing happens when certain genetic triggers inside the
POMC cells aren't working.
The researchers were also able to show the importance of
Islet 1 in zebrafish, which also fail to develop POMC neurons when the
transcription factor was blocked early in development. Since zebrafish use
different gene enhancers to regulate the reading of the Pomc gene, this shows
the true importance of Islet 1 by itself.
So far, genome-wide studies of humans have not shown any
relationship between obesity and changes in the Islet 1 gene. Brain imaging
that tracks the binding of signals to and from POMC cells could reveal further
clues. And in theory, it could be possible to find drugs to increase the
production of Pomc gene products, or to grow replacement cells for
malfunctioning POMC cells.
The paper is published in PLoS Genetics.
Article Credit : http://www.hindustantimes.com/wellness/
No comments:
Post a Comment