Obesity may be due to faulty brain-wiring: Study

Agencies Posted: Feb 06, 2008 at 0744 hrs
Chicago, February 6: Obesity may be hard-wired into the brain from birth, according to a new animal study that appears to bolster the notion that some people are more prone to pile on the pounds than others.

The study released on Tuesday showed that obese rats had faulty brain wiring that impaired their response to the hunger-suppressing hormone leptin.

In obesity-prone rats, "it seems that appetite and obesity are built into the brain," said Sebastien Bouret, an assistant professor of neuroscience at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

"The neurodevelopmental differences in these animals can be seen as early as the first week," he said.

"The results show that obesity can be wired into the brain from early life. The three-million-dollar question now is how to get around the problem."

Leptin plays a central role in fat metabolism. Produced by fat tissue, it acts as a signal to the brain about the body's energy status.

Its role in weight regulation is still unclear, but what scientists do know is that the brain calibrates the need for food intake based in part on leptin levels.

Previous research had shown that the brains of obesity-prone rats were insensitive to these leptin signals, so the researchers looked for brain abnormalities that could explain this.

They found defects in the brain circuits that relay leptin signals throughout the hypothalamus -- the brain's central switchboard for regulating conditions in the body.