How stress eating might prime the body to store fat

By Chiara Townley
Fact checked by Isabel Godfrey
Fact checked by Isabel Godfrey
Using a mouse model, researchers discovered that insulin controls a molecular pathway in the brain that activates during stress and leads to more weight gain.
Researchers have long been
aware that stress can lead to addiction and increase the risk of disease.
Studies have also shown that chronic stress can change eating patterns and
affect food choices. Although some people eat less while under stress, most
tend to overeat and increase their intake of high-calorie foods.
When stress occurs, the
adrenal glands release a hormone called cortisol, which increases appetite and
motivates a person to eat, especially foods high in fat, sugar, or both. In
combination with high insulin — one of the hormones that control food intake,
high cortisol levels are a key factor in so-called stress eating.
Eating patterns vary from
person to person, but some research suggests that a person's biological sex may
affect their stress-coping behavior. A Finnish study, which included almost
7,000 adolescents, showed that females were more likely than males to overeat
when under stress and had a higher risk of obesity.
Understanding what controls
stress eating
Professor Herbert Herzog, head
of the Eating Disorders laboratory at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research
in Darlinghurst, Australia, recently led a team of researchers conducting a
study in mice to understand what controls stress eating. The researchers
published their findings in the journal Cell Metabolism.
"This study indicates
that we have to be much more conscious about what we're eating when we're
stressed to avoid a faster development of obesity."
-Prof. Herbert Herzog
A part of the brain called the
hypothalamus plays the most significant role in controlling food intake, while
scientists have implicated the amygdala in emotional processing. In this study,
the researchers made a discovery: an insulin-controlled molecular pathway in the
brain that may lead to excessive weight gain.
"Our study showed that
when stressed over an extended period and high-calorie food was available, mice
became obese more quickly than those that consumed the same high-fat food in a
stress-free environment," says Dr. Kenny Chi Kin Ip, lead author of the
study.
The molecule at the center of
this pathway in the brain is called NPY. The brain produces this molecule
naturally during stressful times, and the study showed that NPY stimulates the
intake of high-calorie foods in mice.
"We discovered that when
we switched off the production of NPY in the amygdala, weight gain was reduced.
Without NPY, the weight gain on a high-fat diet with stress was the same as
weight gain in the stress-free environment," explains Dr. Ip.
Stress and calorific foods
create vicious cycle
The researchers analyzed the
nerve cells that produced NPY in the amygdala and found that they had receptors
for insulin, a hormone that the pancreas produces, which helps the body store
and use glucose.
In a stress-free environment,
after a meal, the body produces insulin, which is responsible for delivering
the glucose from the bloodstream to the cells so that they can use it for fuel.
It also signals to the hypothalamus that it is time to stop eating.
By comparing mice under stress
with those that were stress-free, the researchers showed that the production of
insulin increased only slightly during stressful times. However, when they
compared stressed mice on a high-calorie diet with stress-free mice on a normal
diet, they found that the levels of this hormone became 10 times higher in the
former group.
These high levels of insulin
caused the nerve cells in the amygdala to become desensitized to insulin and to
boost NPY levels.
"Our findings revealed a
vicious cycle, where chronic, high insulin levels driven by stress and a
high-calorie diet promoted more and more eating," concludes Prof. Herzog.
The research team was
surprised to discover that insulin had such a significant effect on the
amygdala. The results show that insulin does not only regulate functions in the
peripheral regions of the body, but it may also affect important pathways in
the brain. The team hopes to investigate these effects further in the future.
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
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