Showing posts with label Obesity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obesity. Show all posts

Obesity and Heredity

Type and Genes In some animal species, the shape and size of the individual's body is largely determined by the shape and size of its parents' bodies. Many scientists have explored the role of heredity in determining human body shapes. Some researchers argue that obesity has a strong genetic determinant (it tends to run in families).

They cite statistics showing that 80 percent of children having two obese parents are also obese. But why is this the case? Can you really blame your parents for your problems with weight?

Leptin

o Twin Studies Studies of identical twins who were separated at birth and raised in different environments have provided us with some of the most conclusive evidence to date that obesity may be an inherited trait. Whether raised in family environments with fat or thin family members, twins with obese natural parents tend to be obese in later life. According to another study, sets of identical twins who were separated and raised in different families and who ate widely different diets still grew up to weigh about the same. So, if you are overweight, you cannot blame it all on your parents for overfeeding you as a child.

Obesity and Heredity

These studies contain the strongest evidence yet that the genes a person inherits are the major factor determining overweight, leanness, or average weight. Although the exact mechanics remain unknown, it is believed that genes set metabolic rates, influencing how the body handles calories. Some experts believe that this genetic tendency may contribute as much as 25 to 40 percent of the reason for being overweight.

o Specific Obesity Genes? In the past decade, more and more research has pointed to the existence of a special "fat gene." The most promising candidate is the Db gene (for obesity), which is believed to disrupt the body's "I've had enough to eat" signaling system and may prompt individuals to keep eating past the point of being comfortably full. Research on Pima Indians, who have an estimated 75 percent obesity rate and nine in ten who are overweight, seems to point to an Ob gene that is a "thrifty gene." It is theorized that because their ancestors had to struggle through centuries of famine, their ancestor's basal metabolic rates slowed, allowing them to store precious fat for survival. They may have passed these genes on to their children, explaining the lower metabolic rates found in Pimas today and their greater propensity for obesity. Scientists have found that they can manipulate mice genes and construct an Ob gene that will invariably lead to fatness in mice and to the development of diabetes II. Many suspect a human counterpart to this gene, but an actual gene formation has yet to be found. In addition, the (Beta)-3 adrenergic-receptor gene has been identified and found in human beings and mice. When mutated, it is thought to impede the body's ability to bum fat.

Although the 1994 discovery of the Ob gene has provided fertile ground for speculation, researchers have since further refined their theories to focus on a protein that the Ob gene may produce, known as Leptin, and a new leptin receptor in the brain. According to these studies, leptin is the chemical that signals the brain when you are full and need to stop eating. Although obese people have adequate amounts of leptin and working leptin receptors, they do not seem to work properly, much like with the diabetic who has adequate insulin but is not able to utilize it properly.

Another group of scientists appear to have isolated a more direct route to appetite suppression, a protein called GLP-l, which is known to slow down the passage of food through the intestines to allow the absorption of nutrients. When scientists injected GLP-l into the brains of hungry rats, the rats stopped eating immediately. Are leptin and GLP-l key factors in appetite suppression? It is speculated that leptin and GLP-l might play complementary roles in weight control.

Obesity and Heredity

There are all kinds of factors that determine obesity, including genetics and hereditary factors. Read more on Obesity.

Role of Thyroid Stimulating Hormone - And Leptin, A Neurotransmitter - In Obesity

Hunger is regulated by the hypothalamus gland in the brain and controlled by internal body mechanisms. The hypothalamus is a command center in the brain and governs circadian cycles, emotions and behavior. In order for the neurotransmitter in the brain to function properly, this gland must be able to process and regulate the signals generated by the nerves responding to various mediators of food intake. At any time, the hypothalamus communicates with sixty trillion body cells. This center not only signals us to eat; but when we eat, hunger decreases, and the satiety center in the hypothalamus signals us to stop.

A comparative research study on cell metabolism compared normal rats and rats prone to obesity, and showed brain cell differences in the region of the hypothalamus that controls hunger and appetite. The genetic differences in over-eater rats made them less responsive to the appetite controlling hormone leptin, causing them to eat more.

Leptin

The protein hormone leptin is a neurotransmitter important to the homeostatic regulation of body weight. Leptin was identified as a gene in obese mice, in the genetic obesity study in 1994, New York University. Leptin influences hypothalamus and pituitary gland and promotes secretion of growth hormone and thyroid stimulating hormone. Leptin is produced by adipose tissue and synthesized in the placenta and gastrointestinal tract.

Role of Thyroid Stimulating Hormone - And Leptin, A Neurotransmitter - In Obesity

Leptin influences the regulation of appetite, energy and fat reserve. The lack of secretion of leptin rarely causes obesity itself, though some people are less sensitive to its action. Leptin increases metabolism and decreases appetite, by binding to the satiety center in the hypothalamus, signaling that the stomach is full.

Leptin signals your nutritional status to the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral organs. It influences the reproductive system and the release of insulin. Currently, researchers suspect that overweight individuals may have defective leptin utilization, causing satiety to be inhibited. Administration of Leptin from an outside source may affect weight loss.

Role of Thyroid Stimulating Hormone - And Leptin, A Neurotransmitter - In Obesity

Zari Alipour, Ph.D.
more information - http://www.drzaritransformation.com

The Connection Between Leptin And Obesity

Obesity has become an all too common condition in many of the world's industrialized societies today and is continuing to rise at an alarming rate. In the United States, which currently has the highest rate of obesity of any country in the world, some 60 million adults are classed as being obese and a staggering 9 million adults are considered to be severely or morbidly obese.

Although at first sight it might seem that this is simply the result of changes to our diet and a dramatic drop in the level of physical activity for many Americans in recent years, the reality is that scientific studies into the causes of obesity show that the condition results from a complex combination of factors. One such factor which has come under increasing examination over the past ten years or so is genetics and, in particular, the genes involved in the regulation of leptin within the body.

Leptin

Leptin, which takes its name from the Greek word leptos meaning thin, was discovered in 1994 and is associated with the Ob(lep) gene [Ob - obesity, lep - leptin] which is located on chromosome 7 in human beings. In somewhat simplified terms leptin is a protein hormone produced by fat cells which enters the blood stream and travels to the brain, where a high level of leptin in the blood tells the brain that you have sufficient energy reserves or that your energy reserves are too high and that the body needs to burn off some fat. In essence therefore leptin plays an important role in regulating both appetite and metabolism.

The Connection Between Leptin And Obesity

In obese people levels of leptin found in the blood are normally very high and more than sufficient to suppress the appetite and increase the metabolism. This however does not happen and it is believed that obesity may be the result of a resistance to leptin, in much the same way that people suffering from type 2 diabetes are resistant to insulin.

The problem of course is that the human body is extremely complex and, along with the Ob(lep) gene, there are clearly other genes which play a role in regulating both appetite and metabolism. In addition, leptin does not work in isolation and the manner in which it triggers the brain and the chain of events which it sets into motion is not very well understood at this time.

As things stand today, it is very difficult to say whether or not leptin is truly a factor when it comes to obesity and the scientific literature on the subject does not support any real association between the gene, or genes, which regulate leptin and obesity. Nevertheless, with obesity growing at epidemic rates and our obsession with weight loss fueling an enormous weigh loss industry, the drug companies are now working alongside the scientific community and exploring this whole area in the hope of coming up with a suitable weight loss drug.

The Connection Between Leptin And Obesity

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