Body's "Marijuana" May Be Key to Diet Pill

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Noob Saibot
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A dreamy diet pill that someday allows people to eat as much as they want without gaining weight seems possible, based on new research into certain brain chemicals that influence how quickly we burn fat.
Scientists used lab mice to turn down brain levels of endocannabinoids, chemicals produced by our bodies that are similar in molecular structure to the active ingredients in marijuana.
Previous research has found that endocannabinoids play an important role in regulating energy metabolism. In the new study, blocking the activity of endocannabinoids in the brain enabled mice to stay skinny without exercise or dieting. The researchers explained that the mice were in a "hypermetabolic state," in which their bodies were using up energy (that is, calories) at a much higher rate than normal.
"We discovered that these mice were resistant to
obesity

because they burned fat calories much more efficiently than normal mice do," study researcher Daniele Piomelli, a professor at the University of California, Irvine, said in a statement. "We had known that endocannabinoids play a critical role in cell energy regulation, but this is the first time we found a target where this occurs."


This target is a compound called 2-AG, found in high levels in mammalian brains, and researchers think it plays a role in the brain circuits controlling how the body uses energy, which we get from food.
A previous study by Piomelli found these compounds make us crave fat. To see if lowering the levels of these compounds had the opposite effect, Piomelli engineered the brain cells of mice to express only low levels of this compound, then compared the animals' behavior and health with that of normal mice.
The modified mice ate more and moved less than their normal counterparts, but stayed skinny even on a high-fat diet. Not only did they look healthy, they had normal blood pressure, and no increased risk of heart disease and diabetes that usually come with a high-fat diet.
The researchers determined that the modified mice's brown fat was overactive — it was being turned into heat much quicker than in the normal mice. Brown fat is a type of fat that keeps mammals warm, and this heat creation burns off excess energy.
Jumping from lab studies in mice to actual
healthbenefits

for humans is still a ways away, though, since it is difficult to make a drug that acts only in one brain area.
"To produce the desired effects, we would need to create a drug that blocks 2-AG production in the brain, something we're not yet able to do," Piomelli said. "So don't cancel that gym membership just yet."
The study was published today (March 6) in the journal Cell Metabolism.
 
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djonkoman

Well-Known Member
just select it, then it's easier to read

I really wonder what the side-effects of this pill are going to be, I read about certain drugs blocking endocannabinoids before(but probably anandemide and not 2-AG, but I'm not sure), wich are already used to treat obese people in the past, but it had some very nasty side-effects, and is now not in use anymore

also other studies where they blocked mice's cannabinoidreceptors and those mice lived shorter, had a lot of healthproblems etc

hmm, maybe I'm wrong, did a quick search and wikipedia says this:
Neuroscientists often utilize transgenic CB1 knock-out mice to discern novel roles for the endocannabinoid system. While CB1 knock-out mice are healthy and live into adulthood, there are significant differences between CB1 knock-out and wild-type mice. When subjected to a high-fat diet, CB1 knockout mice tend to be about sixty percent leaner and slightly less hungry than wildtype.[56] Compared to wildtype, CB1knock-out mice exhibit severe deficits in motor learning, memory retrieval, and increased difficulty in completing the Morris water maze.[5][57][58] There is also evidence indicating that these knockout animals have an increased incidence and severity of stroke and seizure(Parmentier et al., 2002; Marsicano et al., 2003).
will look further if I can find it again

edit: here is one article speaking about increased mortality
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC21937/
 
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Noob Saibot
Sorry, it's impossible to see here at work (the black text on dark background). I tried to edit it just now but it looks like Edit goes away after a certain time :/
 
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djonkoman

Well-Known Member
just select all the text, like you would do before copying it. makes the background a lighter grey, so the text stands out better
 
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