A new discovery reveals that astrocytes, star-shaped cells in the brain, play a key role in regulating fat metabolism and obesity. These cells act on a cluster of neurons, known as the GABRA5 cluster, effectively acting as a “switch” for weight regulation.

The MAO-B enzyme in these astrocytes was identified as a target for obesity treatment, influencing GABA secretion and thus weight regulation.

KDS2010, a selective and reversible MAO-B inhibitor, successfully led to weight loss in obese mice without impacting their food intake, even while consuming a high-fat diet, and is now in Phase 1 clinical trials.

    •  jarfil   ( @jarfil@beehaw.org ) 
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      10 months ago

      The Romans called it “eat what you want, go vomit, keep eating”, nowadays we call that bulimia, coming soon: “eat what you want, take a pill, keep eating”… somehow makes me think that might not be healthy either.

    •  wahming   ( @wahming@monyet.cc ) 
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      10 months ago

      Funnily, I understood that. There’s been a theory that our current obesity epidemic is caused by an environmental factor influencing our brains into targeting a higher ideal weight than it otherwise should. This is the ‘switch’ the title is referring to, and they’ve presumably discovered its existence and a way to influence it. Of course, there might be more than one…

          • I do not have time right now to read the whole thing, but what strikes me as odd, is that the author blames everything on contaminants, when a change in lifestyle could also be an option. They write about indigenous people moving to western societies and becoming fat, blaming it on industrial food contaminants, but ignore, that western people do not exercise enough. At least mention it and give a reason why you think, that this does not factor into it.

            Then they also generalize about people in the western world getting obese at the same rate, which is not true at all. People in the US are more obese than in the Netherlands, for example. Japan has one of the lowest average BMIs in the world. It just doesn’t add up. Furthermore, there is a lot of talking about causation, when they only prove correlation.

              • Nah, sorry, I was out, when they stated, that more exercise and eating less does not help (and then using an arbitrary time span of 12 months). If you violate the laws of physics in your analysis, it is definitely wrong.

                •  wahming   ( @wahming@monyet.cc ) 
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                  310 months ago

                  Calories in calories out is a pretty discredited theory, if that’s what you are referring to. The human body is not a closed system, so laws of physics is about as irrelevant as possible. The body can influence how much energy to absorb and burn, within limits.

                  Seriously, all the points you’re bringing up were fully addressed at some point in the article. It’s fine if you can’t be bothered to read, but it makes no sense to belittle it in that case.

  • Every time I see one of these weight loss miracles, I wait for the other shoe to drop… and it usually does.

    As I have learned the hard way in my own life, the weight loss miracle is setting a calorie limit and strictly adhering to it (barring medical complications… which, let’s face it, most of the people who say those cause issues with them losing weight probably don’t have them).

    The weight loss miracle I’m waiting on is the pill that rewires your brain to change your relationship with food because, man… that’s the hard part. Having to constantly fight my own brain - no, you aren’t hungry, you’re bored; yes, you actually are satisfied eating a happy meal for 550 cals, you actually do not need a 2 cheeseburger meal large size at 1200 cals, and so on - that’s the struggle for me. I’m down from 270 to 240 so far, but I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t still a constant fight, which is probably what makes relapsing after taking all these drugs such a common thing.

    •  beefcat   ( @beefcat@beehaw.org ) 
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      10 months ago

      The weight loss miracle I’m waiting on is the pill that rewires your brain to change your relationship with food because, man…

      This is what the new class of weight loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy do. They also appear to help curb other addictions like alcohol. But good luck affording them right now.

      • I had actually looked into that and yeah, because it isn’t technically indicated for weight loss most insurance companies have dropped covering it barring severe medical need. Unfortunately, I’m like 80lbs overweight, and even having high blood pressure wasn’t enough to drop the $300/no it would cost out of pocket.

        It makes sense, I mean why cover $300/mo while I lose weight when you can cover my eventual six figure bypass and hospital stay, or roll the dice and hope I just die?

        I did hear that there is some version of it that has (or is soon getting) approval for weight loss so… maybe!

      • I feel like their argument against it probably needs a little unpacking.

        It seems a little disingenuous to me to only examine a model where carbon emissions don’t decrease and then attribute the result to the shield. If the shield is used in addition to reducing our carbon output we’d presumably be cooling things off in both the short and long term.

        The result of failing to reduce our carbon emissions is already projected to be essentially apocalyptic in scope. The rest of the planet might luck out if our own actions reduce us to a population that we’re physically incapable of continuing to output enough carbon to keep warming it, but human civilization certainly doesn’t seem like it can survive keeping it up at the very least.

        If we do get it together push against the wishes of the greediest humans and act as responsible stewards of the planet, it would be smart to try to save as much as possible. If a solar shield can help protect our biodiversity and the stability of our civilization while we get our collective shit together, that’s fantastic. It may even bring with it a sense of urgency and collective responsibility to fix the problem before anything happens to our buffer.

        I get the arguments about the rapidity of change if the shield fails and the difficulty of animals migrating much more quickly, but if something doesn’t give soon they’re not going to have much of anywhere to migrate anyway.

        At what point does the potential benefit of the shield outweigh the risk?

        If I’m falling out of an airplane and my chute is kinda lopsided or whatever in a way that might strangle me if i don’t get my head out of the way, am I just going to let myself hit the ground instead? Or am I going to take the shot I’ve got and make the most of it?

        We’re in freefall and the ground is down there somewhere, rapidly coming up to make friends. We need something now.

        If this is it I say we take it. And we let it be the act that prompts us to be responsible with our planet.

    • The problem with regulating unhealthy food is that it is likely to jack up the price of the only affordable option for a lot of people. Maybe something like subsidizing and lowering cost of healthier foods to make them more affordable instead would be good.

      • We dispose of 30-40% of the global food supply every year simply because it’s not profitable to sell it. It isn’t a supply issue. Subsidies are unnecessary. We could easily live in a post scarcity world if we could discard the profit motive

        •  Storksforlegs   ( @storksforlegs@beehaw.org ) 
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          10 months ago

          Oh I agree! I wish we could move past the profit motive as well, especially when it comes to food and shelter. Criminal that there are no non-profit options in these areas in most western nations.)

          I was just arguing there have been campaigns to raise the price of sugary or convenience foods to get people to eat healthy. But these campaigns just end up hurting low income people who can’t afford the healthier options in the first place. I was suggesting an approach that might make healthy food more accessible - (but that’s within a shitty capitalist system.

          • True that! A lot of legislation passed (if you’re in a country that actually believes in passing legislation) is often incomplete. Even within a capitalist system there can be some degree of a solution achieved. Austerity has thrown a wrench in that but we’ve seen that with enough pressure the state can occasionally help.

            Perhaps (I’m in the US so my ideas may not apply elsewhere) instead of additional subsidies to agriculture we could reallocate the ones were already giving out to more nutritious crops. Corn gets far too much money for example, that’s why it’s in literally everything here. It’s so cheap it’s more cost effective to process the hell out of it and turn it into something else entirely over just growing something else. Likewise, dairy gets a ton of money and we waste so much of it.

            That money could be given to a broader variety of crops, alongside some sort of legislation to make the disposal of perfectly good food either outright illegal or with heavy fines involved to the point that it’s more profitable/less costly to just sell the food. Hell, tax breaks for giving it away too. Because if there’s one thing that will get rich dicks on board it’s tax breaks. Maybe throw some additional incentive to move away from pesticides and monoculture as well

      •  deo   ( @deo@beehaw.org ) 
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        810 months ago

        There’s also a time component. Food can be quick, cheap, or healthy: but you can only choose two (at most). If people have to work for too many hours for shit pay, “unhealthy” becomes an undeniable option.

        • But that is only because of the current market landscape. Healthy food can also be packaged microwave ready and still be cheap. Most of the companies doing that just market it as healthy and charge a higher price for it (because people will still pay it).

  • KDS2010, a selective and reversible MAO-B inhibitor

    This seems like a really odd result. We already have MAOI drugs, they were the first class of antidepressant drugs invented accidentally in the 50s when they found the tuberculosis drug iproniazid made people happier. The selective and reversible MAO-B inhibitor selegiline has been used for years to treat parkinson’s disease. None of these drugs are known to induce weight loss.