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Blood
Test May Reveal Obesity Risk
SAN
FRANCISCO (AP) - A simple blood test may soon be able to predict
which youngsters are likely to grow up to have weight problems,
researchers reported Monday.
Scientists
say such a test already works in lab rats, revealing which ones
will become obese if given access to the rodent equivalent of
limitless hamburgers, potato chips and fried chicken.
Whether such
a test will work in people remains to be proven.
However, researchers
say they are amazed at how similar the underlying machinery of
appetite and weight gain are in rats and people.
``I think
something like this could be applied to the human situation,''
said Dr. Sarah Leibowitz of Rockefeller University in New York.
She presented her research Monday at a meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science.
Her research
involves the link between high-fat food and weight gain.
She and other
scientists believe that too much fat in the diet - probably anything
more than 30 percent of the day's intake of calories - triggers
weight gain by prompting the body to store new fat and making
it crave still more fat to eat.
While such
a system may have helped people survive when food was chronically
scarce, it leads to rampant obesity when fat-loaded food and sugary
soft drinks are cheap and available everywhere.
``For humans,
the overabundance of food is a very recent problem, just in the
past few hundred years,'' said Dr. Joel Elmquist of Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. ``The body is designed to
store as much energy as possible.''
One approach
to weight control is helping people know they have a problem before
it develops. A test that reveals this, Leibowitz said, ``would
tell us how much we can splurge. People would like to have an
early warning sign.''
In rats, this
warning sign is the production of triglycerides, fats that circulate
in the blood.
Leibowitz
raised rats on standard lowfat chow. When they got to be normal-size
juveniles, she fed them a single high-fat meal, then measured
their triglyceride levels.
Ordinarily,
about one-third of run-of-the-mill rats will have a weight problem
if given a chance. Leibowitz found that rats whose triglycerides
shot up the highest after the high-fat meal were also the most
likely to become obese.
The research
is part of a larger effort at many labs to sort out the hundreds
of genes and chemical signals inside the brain that control appetite
and body weight. In particular, Leibowitz is interested in how
high-fat food raises triglycerides, which in turn may activate
fat-sensitive genes deep within the brain.
The researchers
believe that triglycerides, or something that travels with them,
turn on genes in the part of the brain called the hypothalamus.
These genes promote overeating and fat storage.
The research
shows that one high-fat meal is enough to turn on these genes.
The genes
work overtime in normal-size rats that are prone to obesity, churning
out high levels of peptides after a fatty meal. In particular,
the researchers found that animals with high levels of triglycerides
are likely to produce appetite-stimulating substances called galanin
and orexin.
High triglycerides
also interfere with the ability of a hormone called leptin that
ordinarily dampens appetite. In females, they also appear to stimulate
the production of the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone,
which in turn trigger the release of more weight-gain peptides
in the brain.
Reference
Source 89
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