Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

How body regulates weight loss

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Oct, 2014 07:33 AM
  • How body regulates weight loss
A hormone seen as a popular target to develop weight-loss drugs works by directly targeting the brain and triggering previously unknown activity in the nervous system, researchers have found.
 
The fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) hormone has been a key target for developing weight-loss drugs because the protein increases energy expenditure, causing the body to burn calories.
 
But how the hormone worked was not known until now.
 
The team at University of Texas' Southwestern Medical Center discovered that FGF21 acts directly on the brain, activating another hormone called corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF).
 
CRF then stimulates the nervous system, activating brown adipose tissue which generates body heat by burning fat.
 
"FGF21 is known for playing a role in weight loss. We had previously shown that the hormone can act directly on the brain in mice to influence functions like reproduction. In the new study, we show that FGF21 also acts directly on the brain to regulate obesity," said Steven Kliewer, professor of molecular biology and pharmacology.
 
Specifically, researchers found that the FGF21-CRF pathway activates a part of the nervous system that controls various involuntary body functions, called the sympathetic nervous system, to signal to brown fat.
 
Brown fat is often considered the "good" fat that actually burns energy by generating heat - called thermogenesis - to protect from the cold.
 
Once brown fat receives a "weight loss" signal, the tissue burns fat.
 
"The findings are important to ongoing efforts to understand obesity at a molecular level and thus better respond to the obesity epidemic," researchers concluded.
 
The findings were published in the journal Cell Metabolism.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Eating fish may help prevent hearing loss in women

Eating fish may help prevent hearing loss in women
Consumption of two or more servings of fish per week may reduce the risk of hearing loss in women, US researchers said Wednesday....

Eating fish may help prevent hearing loss in women

Physically active boys perform better in school

Physically active boys perform better in school
If you find it dificult to keep pace with the high levels of energy of your male kid, chances are that he will be good at studies, says a study....

Physically active boys perform better in school

Air pollution harming brains of urban young

Air pollution harming brains of urban young
Children living in cities are at an increased risk of developing brain inflammation and neuro-degenerative changes, including Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease, owing to air pollution....

Air pollution harming brains of urban young

Smokers on high-salt diet at rheumatoid arthritis risk

Smokers on high-salt diet at rheumatoid arthritis risk
If you are a smoker and love to eat a high-salt diet, you may be at a greater risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA), researchers say....

Smokers on high-salt diet at rheumatoid arthritis risk

'Electronic skin' to better detect breast cancer

Detecting breast cancer at an early stage is crucial to saving many lives and it can now become a lot easier as researchers have developed an "electronic...

'Electronic skin' to better detect breast cancer

Cyber-bullying in kids increases with age

Cyber-bullying in kids increases with age
Bullying increases as students graduate from elementary to middle school and, overall, girls are more likely to experience verbal/relational and...

Cyber-bullying in kids increases with age