PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Obesity: A new appetite-increasing mechanism discovered

2013-10-29
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Sergueï Fetissov
serguei.fetissov@univ-rouen.fr
INSERM (Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale)
Obesity: A new appetite-increasing mechanism discovered These results are published in the journal Nature Communications, on 25 October 2013.

Obesity affects more than 15% of adults in France, and its constitutive mechanisms are still not completely explained. Normally, fine control of weight and food intake is coordinated by a specialised part of the brain (the hypothalamus). It adjusts food intake depending on reserves and needs. In this way, after a period of excessive food intake and weight gain, a healthy subject will tend spontaneously to reduce their food intake for a while to return to their previous weight. In many of the morbidly obese, this mechanism is faulty: despite their efforts, they continue to consume too much food (hyperphagia), contributing to maintaining a higher weight or even increasing it further.

Even so, their brain should take in the information about over-eating and reduce food intake to encourage weight loss. This observation is all the more surprising given that the hunger hormone ghrelin, produced by the stomach and acting on the hypothalamus, is most frequently found at a normal, or even a reduced level in obese patients.

The study conducted by Sergueï Fetissov and the team from joint research unit 1073 "Nutrition, inflammation and dysfunction of the gut-brain axis" (Inserm/University of Rouen), directed by Pierre Déchelotte, collaborating with Prof Akio Inui's team at the University of Kagoshima (Japan), reveals the molecular mechanism of this paradoxical hyperphagia.

The researchers have highlighted the presence of specific antibodies, or immunoglobulins, in the blood of obese patients, antibodies that recognise ghrelin and regulate appetite. By binding to ghrelin, the immunoglobulins protect the hunger hormone from being broken down rapidly in the bloodstream. The ghrelin can then act on the brain for longer and stimulate appetite.

"The immunoglobulins have different properties in obese patients", explains Sergueï Fetissov, researcher in the Inserm unit in Rouen and main author of the study. "They are more strongly 'attracted' to ghrelin than in subjects of normal weight or in anorexic patients. It is this difference in 'affinity' that enables the immunoglobulins to transport more ghrelin to the brain and boost its stimulating action on food intake", he continues.

The research team has confirmed this mechanism by experiments in rodents. When ghrelin was administered in combination with immunoglobulins extracted from the blood of obese patients, or with immunoglobulins derived from genetically-obese mice, they stimulated food intake more strongly. Conversely, when ghrelin only was given, or combined with immunoglobulins from non-obese people or mice, the rodents were better able to regulate their appetite by restricting food intake. "Our discover open a new opportunity to design treatments acting on the basis of this mechanism to reduce hyperphagia observed in cases of obesity", emphasises Pierre Déchelotte, Director of the joint Inserm/University of Rouen unit. This study extends other work by the research team, published in 2011, on the role of immunoglobulins interfering with different hormones acting on appetite, satiety or anxiety in cases of anorexia, bulimia or depression, and on the probable involvement of intestinal flora (microbiotic) in these interactions. "Our results could also be used to study the opposite phenomenon, loss of appetite, such as observed in cases of anorexia", concludes Pierre Déchelotte.

### Sources Anti-ghrelin immunoglobulins modulate ghrelin stability and its orexigenic effect in obese mice and humans
Kuniko Takagi1,2,3,§, Romain Legrand1,2,§, Akihiro Asakawa3, Haruka Amitani3, Marie François1,2, Naouel Tennoune1,2, Moïse Coëffier1,2,5, Sophie Claeyssens1,2,5, Jean-Claude do Rego2,4, Pierre Déchelotte1,2,5, Akio Inui3 , Sergueï O. Fetissov1,2* 1 Inserm UMR1073, Nutrition, Gut and Brain Laboratory, 76183, Rouen, France;
2Institute for Research and Innovation in Biomedicine (IRIB), Rouen University, Normandy University, 76183, France;
3 Department of Psychosomatic Internal Medicine, Kagoshima University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Kagoshima, 890-8520, Japan;
4 Animal Behavior Platform (SCAC), IRIB, Rouen, 76183, France;
5 Rouen University Hospital, CHU Charles Nicolle, 76183, Rouen, France.
Nature Communications, 25 octobre 2013 - DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3685


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

My eyes are up here!

2013-10-29
My eyes are up here! Eyetrack study demonstrates that men -- and women -- check out female bodies Lincoln, Neb., Oct. 29, 2013 – Usually, women can tell when someone's eyes aren't on her face and are, well, focused elsewhere on her body. In other words, ...

New study suggests coral reefs may be able to adapt to moderate climate change

2013-10-29
New study suggests coral reefs may be able to adapt to moderate climate change Coral reefs may be able to adapt to moderate climate warming, improving their chance of surviving through the end of this century, if there are large reductions in carbon dioxide emissions, ...

Plasmonic crystal alters to match light-frequency source

2013-10-29
Plasmonic crystal alters to match light-frequency source A device like a photonic crystal, but smaller and tunable ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Gems are known for the beauty of the light that passes through them. But it is the fixed atomic arrangements of these crystals ...

Physicists provide new insights into coral skeleton formation

2013-10-29
Physicists provide new insights into coral skeleton formation An international team of scientists, led by physicists from the University of York, has shed important new light on coral skeleton formation. Their investigations, carried out at the nanoscale, provide ...

Unravelling the true identity of the brain of Carl Friedrich Gauss

2013-10-29
Unravelling the true identity of the brain of Carl Friedrich Gauss Researchers reveal the true identity of the brains of mathematicians Carl Friedrich Gauss and medical scholar Conrad Heinrich Fuchs This news release is available in German. Preserved ...

Thawing permafrost: The speed of coastal erosion in Eastern Siberia has nearly doubled

2013-10-29
Thawing permafrost: The speed of coastal erosion in Eastern Siberia has nearly doubled Bremerhaven, October 29, 2013. The high cliffs of Eastern Siberia – which mainly consist of permafrost – continue to erode ...

Green flame moths: Scientists discover 2 new Limacodidae species from China and Taiwan

2013-10-29
Green flame moths: Scientists discover 2 new Limacodidae species from China and Taiwan The representatives of the Limacodidae moth family are widely known as slug moths due to the resemblance of their stunningly colored caterpillars to slug species. Within this popular family the Parasa ...

Old bat gets a new name

2013-10-29
Old bat gets a new name A specimen preserved in a jar of alcohol in The Natural History Museum, London has remained the only record of the Mortlock Islands flying fox, one of the least known bat species on the planet, for over 140 years. That is until now. A team of bat biologists ...

Male birth defect is weakly linked to pesticide exposure, Stanford-led study finds

2013-10-29
Male birth defect is weakly linked to pesticide exposure, Stanford-led study finds STANFORD, Calif. — A study of several hundred chemicals used in commercial pesticides has found only weak evidence that any of them are associated with a common ...

Einstein researchers lead panels at NIH Aging and Chronic Disease Symposium on Geroscience

2013-10-29
Einstein researchers lead panels at NIH Aging and Chronic Disease Symposium on Geroscience October 29, 2013 – (BRONX, NY) – The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has chosen two leading aging researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Microplastics in Texas bays are being swept out to sea

Loneliness increases risk of hearing loss: evidence from a large-scale UK biobank study

Study signals a first in drug discovery: AI can tackle aging’s true complexity

Combining laboratory techniques yields wealth of information about deadly brain tumors

Low-viscosity oil boosts PDMS SlipChip: Enabling safer cell studies and gradient generation

Dark matter formed when fast particles slowed down and got heavy, new theory says

Earliest reptile footprints rewrite the timeline of tetrapod evolution

How the brain allows us to infer emotions

Chinese researchers reveal lipid-based communication between body and gut microbes

Scientists discover new way the brain learns

A downside of taurine: it drives leukemia growth

NIH researchers discover a new tissue biomarker for aggressive breast cancer risk and poorer survival

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists and mental health

Cannabis use among older adults

New global model shows how to bring environmental pressures back to 2015 levels by 2050

New catalyst boosts efficiency of CO2 conversion

New study shows how ancient climates may inform monsoon prediction

New gel could boost coral reef restoration

UPF and the Royal Veterinary College make the first 3D reconstructions of cat hearts to compare them with humans’

Special report highlights LLM cybersecurity threats in radiology

Australia’s oldest prehistoric tree frog hops 22 million years back in time

Sorek awarded $500,000 Gruber Genetics Prize for pioneering discoveries in bacterial immune systems

Ryan Cooke and Max Pettini receive $500,000 Gruber Cosmology Prize for Measuring a Key Value at the Dawn of the Universe

$500,000 Gruber Neuroscience Prize awarded to Edward Chang for groundbreaking discoveries on the neural coding of speech comprehension and production

IU, Regenstrief researchers develop an app to enable the efficient integration of patient medical information into dental practices

Postpartum depression and bonding: Long-term effects on school-age children

Evaluation of in-vitro activity of ceftazidime-avibactam against carbapenem-resistant gram-negative bacteria: A cross-sectional study from Pakistan

Molecular testing of FLT3 mutations in hematolymphoid malignancies in the era of next-generation sequencing

Sugar-coated nanotherapy dramatically improves neuron survival in Alzheimer’s model

Uncovering compounds that tame the heat of chili peppers

[Press-News.org] Obesity: A new appetite-increasing mechanism discovered