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Explained: How A Gene For Obesity Affects The Brain

According to a recent by the University of Michigan, a gene called SH2B1 has been shown to play an important role in regulating food intake. The study was conducted by Liangyou Rui, Ph.D., Department of Molecular & Integrative Physiology and the Elizabeth Weiser Caswell Diabetes Institute and his team.

Explained: How A Gene For Obesity Affects The Brain
Representational image (Getty Images)

By ETV Bharat Health Team

Published : Jul 16, 2024, 6:52 PM IST

Hyderabad:A recent study by the University of Michigan says that obesity is a complicated condition, caused by a combination of genetics, the food environment, behaviour, and other factors.

For millennia, getting enough food to survive and thrive was difficult. For most people, it’s now as easy as opening a refrigerator. According to a study done by Michigan Medicine, a gene called SH2B1 has been shown to play an important role in regulating food intake.

SH2B1 mutations in people are associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, formerly known as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, it said.

"This gene controls feeding and energy expenditure. Obesity is caused by two opposing axes: If you eat too much, you gain fat. Spend too little energy and fat accumulates,” said Liangyou Rui, Ph.D., Department of Molecular & Integrative Physiology and the Elizabeth Weiser Caswell Diabetes Institute at the University of Michigan Medical School.

A study by Rui and his team identifies where this gene is acting inside the brain, an area called the paraventricular hypothalamus, or PVH, which is involved in regulating blood pressure and fluid balance.

Additionally, the team discovered that neurons that express SH2B1 create a circuit, talking to neurons downstream in an area known as the dorsal raphe nucleus, located in the brainstem.

This area is implicated in energy balance and body weight maintenance and emotion-motivated behavior. Stimulating this circuit suppresses appetite in mice. Conversely, silencing the SH2B1-expressing neurons in the PVH leads to obesity, it added.

The team also uncovered the molecular mechanism behind how SH2B1 helps maintain weight, in part by enhancing BDNF/TrkB signalling, which during development promotes brain growth and in a mature brain, maintains brain health. When this signalling goes awry, obesity and metabolic disease develop.

One theory, Rui notes, is that the inflammation associated with weight gain can negatively affect this pathway in an indirect way, weakening the signals to stop eating. “We know that SH2B1 action is important, as it is highly conserved across species, from the fruit fly to humans,” said Rui.

"It functions as sort of a universal currency, not only enhancing cell signalling but the hormones leptin and insulin, which help regulate appetite and metabolism," added Rui. Furthermore, there have so far been no identified side effects to enhancing SH2B protein, unlike currently popular drugs, such as Ozempic or Mounjaro, that activate glp-1 receptors.

"If we can find a way to enhance SH2B activity, there is huge promise for treating obesity and its related diseases," Rui concluded.

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