"This was basic science that unlocked an interesting mystery," said Supriya Srinivasan, Assistant Professor at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) in the US.
Previous studies had shown that the neurotransmitter serotonin can drive fat loss. Yet no one was sure exactly how.
Srinivasan and her colleagues experimented with roundworms called C elegans, which are often used as model organisms in biology.
These worms have simpler metabolic systems than humans, but their brains produce many of the same signalling molecules, leading many researchers to believe that findings in C elegans may be relevant for humans.
By testing one gene after another, they hoped to find the gene without which fat burning would not occur. This process of elimination led them to a gene that codes for a neuropeptide hormone they named FLP-7.
They found that the mammalian version of FLP-7 (called Tachykinin) had been identified 80 years ago as a peptide that triggered muscle contractions when dribbled on pig intestines.
Scientists back then believed this was a hormone that connected the brain to the gut, but no one had linked the neuropeptide to fat metabolism in the time since.
Lavinia Palamiuc, a TSRI research associate, tagged FLP-7 with a fluorescent red protein so that it could be visualised in living animals, because the roundworm body is transparent.
She showed that FLP-7 was indeed secreted from neurons in the brain in response to elevated serotonin levels. FLP-7 then travelled through the circulatory system to start the fat burning process in the gut.
"That was a big moment for us," said Srinivasan.
For the first time, researchers had found a brain hormone that specifically and selectively stimulates fat metabolism, without any effect on food intake.
This signals another set of neurons to begin producing FLP-7, which then activates a receptor in intestinal cells, and the intestines begin turning fat into energy.
Next, the researchers investigated the consequences of manipulating FLP-7 levels.
While increasing serotonin itself can have a broad impact on an animal's food intake, movement and reproductive behavior, the researchers found that increasing FLP-7 levels farther downstream didn't come with any obvious side effects.
The worms continued to function normally while simply burning more fat.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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