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Home > Lifestyle News > Health And Fitness News > Article > Brain switch discovery may spell end for yo yo dieting

Brain switch discovery may spell end for yo-yo dieting

Updated on: 14 February,2018 01:29 PM IST  |  Melbourne
IANS |

Scientists have discovered a molecular switch in the brain that regulates fat burning - and could provide a way to control weight gain following dieting

Brain switch discovery may spell end for yo-yo dieting

Representational Picture
Representational Picture


Scientists have discovered a molecular switch in the brain that regulates fat burning - and could provide a way to control weight gain following dieting. Being able to control this switch may be a therapy for obesity and other metabolic disorders such as Type 2 diabetes.


Researchers at Monash University in Australia identified the switch that potentially controls the human body's capacity to store fat, particularly after long periods of "famine" or weight loss - a process that underlies yo-yo dieting, where we regain the weight lost caused by dieting. Associate Professor Zane Andrews and his colleagues at the Monash have identified a protein in mice, called carnitine acetyltransferase (Crat), in hunger-processing brain cells that regulate fat storage after dieting.


When we are dieting (or evolutionarily when there is a famine) our bodies burn more fat to provide enough energy. However, at the same time our brains fight to conserve energy and, as soon as food becomes available, the body switches from burning to storing fat and instead uses ingested calories from food. The team discovered the Crat protein and developed a mouse that had this protein genetically switched off. These mice, when fasted or fed after a fast, consume their fat reserves at a greater than normal rate. According to Andrews, repeated dieting, or yo-yo dieting, may lead to weight gain because the brain interprets these diets as short famines and urges the person to store more fat for future shortages. For the first time the Crat protein in hunger-processing brain cells has been identified as the switch that instructs the body to replace the lost weight through increased fat storage.

"Manipulating this protein offers the opportunity to trick the brain and not replace the lost weight through increased appetite and storage of fat," Andrews said. "By regulating this protein we can ensure that diet-induced weight loss stays off rather than sneaking back on," he said.

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