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  #1   ^
Old Wed, Mar-17-04, 14:43
gotbeer's Avatar
gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Default "Scientists: Brain enzyme regulates appetite, weight"

Scientists: Brain enzyme regulates appetite, weight

Wednesday, March 17, 2004 Posted: 1:45 PM EST (1845 GMT)


http://www.cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/diet...e.ap/index.html

(AP) -- Scientists say an enzyme in the brain that monitors energy in cells also appears to regulate appetite and weight, a discovery that could lead to new treatments for obesity.

The enzyme is known as AMP-activated protein kinase, or AMPK. Its activity is regulated by the hormone leptin, which previously was linked to appetite suppression.

Harvard researchers found in experiments with mice that when AMPK was inhibited, the animals ate less and lost weight. When AMPK levels were boosted, the mice ate more and gained weight.

Barbara B. Kahn, the lead author of the study, said the work identifies a new leptin signaling pathway and a promising new target in humans.

"It will affect drug development and approaches for new preventions and treatments," Kahn said.

The study appears Wednesday in an online version of the journal Nature.

Dr. David Cummings, a University of Washington obesity researcher who was not involved in the work, said the findings complement recent work in Britain in which the hormone ghrelin, an appetite-stimulating hormone, also was found to affect AMPK levels.

Almost a third of American adults are obese, up from 14 percent a generation ago, according to government data. Only a few prescription weight-control drugs are on the market, and they produce only modest weight loss, either by suppressing appetite or by preventing the body from digesting and absorbing fats.

Cummings said studies show that hormone replacement therapy won't be a simple cure for the nation's obesity woes. Studies on using leptin to control weight found that obese people had lost sensitivity to the hormone, Cummings said.

Some researchers believe AMP-kinase might be more effective in weight control than leptin because its works more directly on appetite signaling at the end of the biochemical pathway in the brain. Clinical trials on human patients will take years to complete, researchers said.
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  #2   ^
Old Wed, Mar-17-04, 18:04
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CindySue48 CindySue48 is offline
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It's bad enough that they're so drug oriented in this country.....but when they get into the brain drugs I really start to cringe!

Thanks, I'll stick to my way of eating. The natural way!
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Old Wed, Mar-17-04, 19:12
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Nancy LC Nancy LC is online now
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Cool! Glad to see they're making progress on identifying the mechanics of appetite and weight gain. Whatever drug company first gets through FDA approvals with something like this is gonna make a pile.

I'm all for brain drugs. I'm sure people with depression and other disorders of the brain and endocrine system are pretty happy about them too.
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Old Wed, Mar-17-04, 20:45
cc48510 cc48510 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nancy LC
Cool! Glad to see they're making progress on identifying the mechanics of appetite and weight gain. Whatever drug company first gets through FDA approvals with something like this is gonna make a pile.

I'm all for brain drugs. I'm sure people with depression and other disorders of the brain and endocrine system are pretty happy about them too.


They've known Leptin controls appetite for a while now. The most interesting studies on hunger are those performed on the Hypothalamuses of Rats. They found when they lesioned [burned out] certain parts of the Hypothalamus that the Rats lost all interest in eating, but lesioning other parts caused the Rats to become obese. They found that when those parts were stimulated, they got the opposite effect. THey found that lesioning one part of the Hypothalamus even caused the overrelease of insulin. It has been known for at least 30 years that these portions of the Brain modulate hunger and fat storage in response to changes in Insulin and Blood Sugar Levels as well as to changes in Metabolism.

http://www.albion.edu/psychology/fa...y101/hunger.htm
http://www.magnet.neuro.fsu.edu/Research/hypo1.html
http://www.sp.uconn.edu/~ns166vc/Notes/Appetite.htm
http://www.sciencedaily.com/release...80506080957.htm
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