Food for thought - two chemicals control appetiteScientists have found that a combination of two appetite-controlling hormones can provoke significant weight loss in obese animals, suggesting that the same ought to work for fat humans.
Now it looks like leptin has a partner in crime in the form of a pancreatic hormone called amylin, which if injected alongside leptin can allow over-eaters to return to sveltedom. Writing in this week's PNAS, Jonathan Roth and his colleagues at Amylin Pharmaceuticals injected obese rodents with a combination of leptin and an artificial analogue of amylin. The overweight animals shed nearly 13% of their body weight, and the appetite-controlling regions of their brains also began to show a normal response to leptin again. This, say the researchers, could be a powerful strategy to help overwight humans. Moreover, it provides interesting insights into how the hormonal orchestra plays out appetite and weight control. 11th May 2008 |
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