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Why does eating feel so good? It's
all in the head
Washington -
Why does eating feel so good? The secret may lie in the head,
not in the stomach, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.
Tests on rats show that the appetite
hormone ghrelin acts on pleasure receptors in the brain.
The findings may help researchers
develop better diet drugs.
"In mice and rats ghrelin triggers
the same neurons as delicious food, sexual experience, and many
recreational drugs; that is, neurons that provide the sensation of
pleasure and the expectation of reward," the researchers write in
Friday's issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
"These neurons produce dopamine and
are located in a region of the brain known as the ventral tegmental
area (VTA)," wrote the researchers, headed by Dr. Tamas Horvath of the
Yale University School of Medicine in Connecticut.
Horvath's team found that ghrelin,
itself only discovered in the last decade, acts on a molecular
structure on brain cells called the ghrelin receptor growth hormone
secretagogue 1 receptor or GHSR for short.
When ghrelin was infused into this
area of the rats' brains, they ate as hungrily as they did after being
kept hungry overnight, the researchers said.
Ghrelin
is produced in the gut and triggers the brain to promote eating.
Several hormones are known to be
involved in eating and appetite, and studies have shown that
influencing them can affect weight gain in rats and mice. Influencing
human eating behavior has proven far more difficult, however.
Horvath said it might be possible to
design a drug that interferes with GHSR and thus help people with
eating disorders. -- Reuters Limited
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