Literature DB >> 24583765

If body fatness is under physiological regulation, then how come we have an obesity epidemic?

John R Speakman1.   

Abstract

Life involves a continuous use of energy, but food intake, which supplies that energy, is episodic. Feeding is switched on and off by a complex array of predominantly gut-derived peptides (and potentially nutrients) that initiate and terminate feeding bouts. Energy is stored as glucose and glycogen to overcome the problem of the episodic nature of intake compared with the continuous demand. Intake is also adjusted to meet immediate changes in demands. Most animals also store energy as fat. In some cases, this serves the purpose of storing energy in anticipation of a known future shortfall (e.g., hibernation, migration, or reproduction). Other animals, however, store fat in the absence of such anticipated needs, and in this case the fat appears to be stored in preparation for unpredictable catastrophic shortfalls in supply. Fat storage, however, brings disadvantages as well as advantages, in particular an increased risk of predation. Hence, many animals seem to have evolved a dual intervention point system preventing them from storing too little or too much fat. The physiological basis of the lower intervention point is well established, but the upper intervention point is much less studied. Human obesity can potentially be understood in an evolutionary context as due to drift in the upper intervention point following release from predation 2 million years ago (the drifty gene hypothesis) combined with a stimulus in modern society to overconsume calories, possibly attempting to satisfy intake of a limiting micro- or macro-nutrient like protein (the protein leverage hypothesis).

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24583765     DOI: 10.1152/physiol.00053.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiology (Bethesda)        ISSN: 1548-9221


  11 in total

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Review 3.  Gut-Brain Cross-Talk in Metabolic Control.

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Review 4.  Gut-brain communication and obesity: understanding functions of the vagus nerve.

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Review 5.  Attenuating the Biologic Drive for Weight Regain Following Weight Loss: Must What Goes Down Always Go Back Up?

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Review 6.  Changes in Energy Expenditure with Weight Gain and Weight Loss in Humans.

Authors:  Manfred J Müller; Janna Enderle; Anja Bosy-Westphal
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Review 7.  Quantitative approaches to energy and glucose homeostasis: machine learning and modelling for precision understanding and prediction.

Authors:  Thomas McGrath; Kevin G Murphy; Nick S Jones
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Authors:  James R Lackner
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9.  A neuroendocrine role for chemerin in hypothalamic remodelling and photoperiodic control of energy balance.

Authors:  Gisela Helfer; Alexander W Ross; Lynn M Thomson; Claus D Mayer; Patrick N Stoney; Peter J McCaffery; Peter J Morgan
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-05-26       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  The unidentified hormonal defense against weight gain.

Authors:  Jens Lund; Camilla Lund; Thomas Morville; Christoffer Clemmensen
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2020-02-25       Impact factor: 8.029

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