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    A natural brain substance has been found to block weight gain.

    American researchers said mice with increased levels of the chemical
    orexin did not gain weight when fed a high-fat diet.

    The researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center said orexin worked
    by increasing the body’s sensitivity to the weight-loss hormone leptin.

    Dr. Masashi Yanagisawa, senior author of the study and a professor of
    molecular genetics at UT Southwestern, said boosting orexin levels may
    prove useful as a therapy against obesity.

    “Obese people are not deficient in leptin,” Dr. Yanagisawa said. “They
    have tons of leptin floating around. The problem is that their brain isn’t
    very sensitive to it.”

    Dr Yanagisawa, who discovered orexin nearly 10 years ago, says the
    chemical is involved in controlling appetite and sleep. Reduced levels of
    orexin were found to lead to the sleep disorder narcolepsy in both rodents
    and humans.

    Orexin, which Dr. Yanagisawa discovered about a decade ago, is involved
    in controlling appetite and sleep. He found that reduced levels of orexin
    lead to the sleep disorder narcolepsy in both rodents and humans.

    Orexin can boost the appetite in the short term, but, paradoxically, a lack of
    orexin leads to obesity in the long run. “It’s been confusing,” said Dr.
    Yanagisawa, an investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at
    UT Southwestern.

    Part of the confusion comes about because orexin acts on two different
    molecules in the brain, OX1R and OX2R. In the current study, the
    researchers aimed to distinguish which action was involved in weight
    control.

    The researchers increased the levels of orexin in mice, either through
    genetic engineering or by administering the hormone into the brain.

    When these mice were fed a healthy diet, the increased levels of orexin
    made little difference in their weights compared to normal mice; however,
    when the mice were fed a high-fat diet, the high-orexin mice remained
    lean while the normal animals became obese. This difference was due to
    an increase in the rate of metabolism – high-orexin mice burned fuel up to
    20 percent faster than normal mice.

    The high-orexin mice had lower blood levels of leptin, implying that the
    leptin was more effective in controlling weight in these mice. In addition,
    when the researchers administered leptin to the high-orexin mice, the
    animals responded with a much greater loss of appetite and weight
    compared to normal mice given leptin.

    The researchers also administered a substance that activates only OX2R
    to separate out orexin’s possible double action. The mice given this
    substance showed the same beneficial response to high-fat diets and
    leptin, confirming that OX2R controls the interaction.

    These results clarify the action of orexin and point to OX2R as a potential
    route to help treat obesity, but any practical use is still far off, Dr.
    Yanagisawa said.

    A primary hurdle to orexin-based drug development is a defense system
    in the body called the blood-brain barrier, which prevents many
    substances in the blood from penetrating into the brain. Because of this,
    orexin cannot reach the brain when it is given orally or as an intravenous
    or subcutaneous injection.

    “Fortunately, however, high-orexin mice show no sleep/wake disturbance
    or other serious side effects,” Dr. Yanagisawa said.

    “This study suggests that if we can develop a compound that mimics the
    action of orexin on its receptor, we might be able to treat narcolepsy and
    other sleep disorders, as well as obesity,” Dr. Yanagisawa said. “We have
    already screened out some such ‘orexin mimics.’

    The next step is to do serious medicinal chemistry to make variations of
    these compounds to get them more potent and specific. If we could
    advance to early clinical trials in five years, I’d say we’d be lucky.

    “I hope that in the long run a suitable orexin mimic might help people be
    more mentally productive during the day, as well as be able to lose weight
    more easily.”

    The study appears in the journal Cell Metabolism.
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    Chemical Blocks Weight Gain
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