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A study of protein-munching rats shows that a low-carb diet sparks a chain of

biological events that ultimately curbs hunger.

The French researchers explain it this way: Protein, the staple of such

weight-loss regimens, appears to increase glucose production in the small

intestine — the rise of which is monitored by the liver and then registered by

the brain. In turn, the brain sends out an “all full” message, cutting back on

the drive to eat more.

“The current findings provide an answer to the question of how

protein-enriched meals decrease hunger and reduce eating, unsolved up to now,”

the study authors, led by Gilles Mithieux of the Institut National de la Sante

et de la Recherche Medicale in Lyon, France, said in a prepared statement.

“This novel understanding of the effect of diet protein will open new gates

in the elaboration of future medical treatments of obesity,” Mithieux said.

The researchers fed one group of rats a 50 percent-protein diet enriched with

soya protein and casein. Another group ate a starch-enriched diet that contained

just 17 percent protein.

Reporting in the November issue of Cell Metabolism, the French team

found that by the end of just one week, rats on the protein-rich regimen had

consumed 15 percent less food than those in the starch-diet group.

The protein-diet rats also gained significantly less weight over the course

of the week than the starch-diet rats, the study found. And it wasn’t that the

rats on the protein-rich diet didn’t like what they were eating, since the

researchers had made sure to include foods the rodents loved.

A more complex explanation for the protein-linked weight loss was revealed

through blood tests. They showed that two genes specifically involved in

intestinal glucose production were much more active in the protein-diet group

compared with the starch-diet group.

Even after food absorption had been completed, the small intestines of the

protein-diet rats continued to deliver high levels of glucose into their portal

vein — a vessel that shuttles blood from the digestive system and other organs

to the liver.

Glucose sensors in the liver of these protein-diet rats were found, in turn,

to have signaled those areas of the brain responsible for appetite control —

bearing the message that liver glucose levels had risen. A quick and steady drop

off in both hunger and eating ensued.

Based on these findings, Mithieux and his team believe they have unraveled —

at least in rats — a connection between the digestive system and the central

nervous system that may explain why protein so quickly curbs hunger.

Scientists Uncover Protein’s Weight-Loss Secrets  was originally published on blackdoctor.org

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