Signaling pathway mTOR plays a role in the brain's
ability to sense how much energy the body has available
A cell-signaling pathway in the brain that is linked to
the development of cancer and diabetes is also a key
part of networks that regulate food intake, say
University of Cincinnati (UC) researchers.
The finding might one day lead to new ways of helping
obese people lose weight, either with new drugs or by
carefully designing diets that can activate this
pathway.
Scientists from UC's Genome Research Institute
demonstrated that the signaling pathway mTOR--activated
by nutrient and hormonal signals--plays a role in the
brain's ability to sense how much energy the body has
available.
This finding, the researchers say, suggests that very
specific micronutrients may drive these pathways in the
brain and could lead to a more scientific approach to
diet design to help regulate body weight.
The study, led by Randy Seeley, PhD, professor in UC's
psychiatry department, appears in the May 12, 2006 issue
of the journal Science.
Ingesting calories (energy in the form of nutrients) has
two purposes, says Dr. Seeley.
"We take in calories to maintain levels of stored fuel
(energy) and adequate available fuel," he says. "The
signals that tell our brain about both the stored and
the available energy in our body can activate the mTOR
pathway in key parts of the brain that control
appetite."
Knowing that mTOR basically serves as a "check-point"
for sensing energy changes, the researchers predicted
that it could be manipulated to alter food intake.
The mTOR pathway is very sensitive to "branched-chain"
amino acids, particularly leucine, Dr. Seeley explains.
In laboratory studies, he and his team found that when
they administered leucine directly to the hypothalamus,
a brain region that controls a number of metabolic
processes, animals ate less.
Other, similar amino acids did not give the same
results.
This animal study, says Dr. Seeley, could eventually
have implications for human obesity.
"Rather than basing our diets only on macronutrients
like fat or carbohydrates, we might one day be designing
diets based on micronutrients like amino acids," he
says.
But, Dr. Seeley adds, that certainly doesn't mean people
should "run out and add more leucine to their diets."
"We still have a lot to learn about how these nutrients
would act if simply ingested with other nutrients, in
what form they could be most effective, and even if they
are effective at all when not administered directly to
the brain," he says.