The Science Behind Feeling Full Daily Beast, NY - Nov 28, 2008 Leptin is produced by the body?s fat cells in direct proportion to how much fat that body has. In other words, the heavier you are, the more leptin you have ...
Is Resveratrol the Fountain of Youth? Natural News.com, AZ - Nov 27, 2008 I have studied the calorie restriction science for 20 years and I am also the leading diet expert on the fat-derived hormone leptin, which is the overall ...
How much of hunger is hormonal? ABC Science Online, Australia - Nov 19, 2008 "Your fat makes a hormone called leptin, which tells the brain how much fat there is in the body," he says. So, theoretically, if we inject obese people ...
High-Fructose Corn Syrup Gets a Bad Rap Sci-Tech Today - Nov 28, 2008 There is no difference in fasting glucose, insulin resistance, nutrient intake, satiety, uric acid, appetite, leptin and ghrelin, and there is no difference ...
Fast food may be addictive eTaiwan News, Taiwan - Nov 12, 2008 "Their brain loses its ability to respond to these hormones as body fat increases," he says. The fatter they get, and the more leptin they make, ...
Obesity: A growing problem Part 2) Tempo, Philippines - Nov 16, 2008 Amgen Inc. is conducting early tests of leptin, a hormone secreted by fat cells that signals the body to stop eating when it has stored enough fat. ...
Waiting for that life-changing idea? Just sleep on it Times Online, UK - Nov 21, 2008 A lack of sleep plays havoc with the appetite controlling hormones, leptin and gherlin, making you super-hungry. Avoid night-time trips to the fridge In ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: body weight + new + leptin Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)
Assessment of Adiponectin and Leptin as Biomarkers of Positive ... Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, MD - Obesity and overweight were defined according to the Italian body mass index reference tables for age and sex. Fifty-four normal-weight children were ...
How to set yourself up for diet success Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY - Aug 4, 2008 Stay at that level for at least six months to give your body a chance to adjust to its new, lower "set point." Your set point is the weight that the body...
Endocrinology & Metabolism News Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, MD - (Nature Medicine [June 2008] 14 (6):667) Maintenance of reduced body weight is associated with leptin-reversible changes in neural activities in response to ...
Jonathan Kay on leptin: This explains why you're so fat National Post, Canada - Jul 8, 2008 As Beck writes, "When humans (and rodents) lose 10% or more of their body weight, leptin falls rapidly and sets off a cascade of physiological changes that ...
FITNESS Q&A: Diet supplements and weight loss Lancaster Newspapers, PA - Aug 5, 2008 A. Raise a red flag on any supplement that promises to reduce body fat and increase muscle mass. Busy, stressed-out people are a favorite target for these ...
REM Sleep Tied to Obesity Risk in Children MedPage Today, NJ - Aug 4, 2008 Each child's weight and height were measured, and body mass index was calculated and reflected as a BMI z score. The mean BMI z score for the entire study ...
This little drug went to market Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - Jul 30, 2008 To monitor this there was a battery of measurements - body fat, cholesterol, triglycerides, insulin and glucose, leptin and energy expenditure. ...
A Practical "ABCDE" Approach to the Metabolic Syndrome RedOrbit, TX - Aug 5, 2008 Aerobic exercise training improves insulin sensitivity without changes in body weight, body fat, adiponectin, and inflammatory markers in overweight and ...
Columnist Melinda Beck answers readers' questions Wall Street Journal - Jul 14, 2008 Q: You need a postscript to your column of July 8 [which described how drops in the hormone leptin after weight loss prompt the body to put weight back on]. ...
Leptin and the regulation of body weight in mammals. - JM Friedman, JL Halaas - Nature, 1998 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Click here to read Leptin and the regulation of bodyweight in mammals. ... Genetics,
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Rockefeller University, New York, New...
Serum immunoreactive-leptin concentrations in normal-weight and obese humans - RV Considine, MK Sinha, ML Heiman, A Kriauciunas, … - N Engl J Med, 1996 - Mass Med Soc ... A new study provides evidence that most cases of ... 139 obese subjects than in 136
normal-weight subjects ... positively correlated with the percentage of body fat and ...
Leptin, leptin receptors, and the control of body weight. - JM Friedman - Nutr Rev, 1998 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Leptin, leptin receptors, and the control of bodyweight. Friedman JM.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New York, New York, USA. ...
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food intake and bodyweight. ... of obesity, and possibilities for new treatments ... -
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post-absorptive state was examined ... never-obese, 24 obese) at usual bodyweight. ...
Relatively low plasma leptin concentrations precede weight gain in Pima Indians - E Ravussin, RE Pratley, M Maffei, H Wang, JM … - Nature Medicine, 1997 - nature.com ... University, 1230 York Avenue, New York, New York 10021 ... gained weight and 17 of whom
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New area brain target of fat hormone leptin in regulating body weight and energy expenditure
Researchers have identified a new area of the brain that responds to the fat hormone leptin in regulating body weight and energy expenditure.
They said that the region seems to be particularly important in enabling the body to resist weight gain from a high-fat diet.
Their discovery, they said, indicates that leptin acts on more brain areas than previously believed, to regulate body weight.
Leptin is secreted by fat tissue into the bloodstream, where it travels to the brain and other tissues. It acts on leptin receptors in areas of the hypothalamus to trigger fat loss and decreased appetite.
Bradford Lowell and his colleagues published their findings in mice in the journal Neuron.
They reported that an area called the ventromedial hypothalamus ( VMH ) is also important in leptin response, in addition to the area called the arcuate nucleus ( ARC ) of the hypothalamus, which is already known to be a target of leptin signaling.
Even though leptin was known to act on the neurons of the ARC, wrote the researchers, knocking out leptin receptors in those neurons caused only mild obesity in mice, compared to the effects of knocking out such receptors throughout the brain.
Such findings, they said, hinted at the role of another region of the hypothalamus as a leptin target. The VMH constituted a good candidate for such a leptin target region because neurons there express leptin receptors, said the researchers. Also, they noted, destroying the VMH produces massive obesity in mice.
To explore the role of the VMH in leptin signaling, Lowell and his colleagues generated mice lacking leptin receptors only in specific neurons in the VMH. Electrophysiological studies of the VMH neurons in these altered mice showed that they were not triggered by leptin to fire, as were such neurons in normal mice.
The researchers found that the mice lacking VMH leptin receptors showed the same degree of body weight gain as those engineered to lack leptin receptors in the ARC. What's more, the researchers found that knocking out both types of neurons showed an additive effect on weight gain in the animals. Their measurements in the mice revealed that such weight gain was due to an increase in fat stores.
Importantly, when the researchers fed the mice deficient in VMH leptin receptors a high-fat, high-sugar diet, they found that the animals rapidly gained weight throughout the feeding period. In contrast, normal mice gained some weight, but leveled off during the feeding period. The knockout mice continued to gain weight, found the researchers, because they did not suppress their food intake, as did normal mice.
The researchers noted that the combined effects on obesity of the deficiency of VMH leptin receptors and high-fat feeding "were greater than expected from the individual components added together.
" This synergistic interaction strongly suggests that leptin action on [the VMH neurons] plays a particularly important role in resisting high-fat-diet-induced obesity."
Lowell and his colleagues concluded that " In total, these findings suggest that the ability of leptin to restrain body weight is distributed to a number of different sites in the brain."