Current Issue on Newstands Now - Apr/May 2008 - Click Here to See What's Inside! Subscribe Now! Read the Current Issue Online Now!
Newsrooms
Blood Sugar
Medications
What Can I Eat?
Exercise
Complications
Health Care
The Cure
People are Talking
Living with Diabetes
About Us
Get the Free E-Newsletter…
Diabetes Health E-Newsletter

Each week the Diabetes Health E-Newsletter delivers links to the very latest in news, reviews, blogs and videos from Diabetes Health direct to your inbox.

See an example E-Newsletter

As a subscriber you'll get access to the amazing Diabetes Health Digital Advantage™ so you can read the current issue of Diabetes Health magazine online wherever you are!

Email Address:
Area of Interest:
Latest
Popular
Top Rated
Diabetes Health Reference Charts
Motivation Archives
Print | Email | Comments (3)

Study Explains Why I'm Fat and You're Not: Over-Eating Linked to Low Dopamine

Linda von Wartburg
24 November 2007
Recommend this Article:

Average Rating:

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter; that is, a molecule that carries messages between neurons in your brain. It's a feel-good neurotransmitter that makes you think "I want that! I'm going to get it! And wow, that was great!"

The more dopamine you secrete in response to an activity, the more quickly you feel rewarded by that activity. If you don't secrete much dopamine in response to a rewarding activity, you have to go at the activity more vigorously in order to squeeze out enough dopamine to make you feel rewarded.

Researchers from the University of Buffalo, NY, recently studied the connection between dopamine and overeating, and they found that people who have genetically lower dopamine are more motivated to eat and that they eat more.

First the researchers tested 29 obese adults and 45 non-obese adults to see whether they had a copy of the Taq1 A1 allele, a gene that codes for fewer dopamine receptors. About half the population carries one A1 allele and one A2 allele, and nearly everyone else carries two copies of the A2 allele.

Two copies of the A2 allele give you more dopamine receptors, so it's easier for you to experience reward. If you're stuck with a copy of the A1 allele, however, you end up with fewer dopamine receptors. As a result, you need to consume more of a rewarding substance, such as food, to get the same good feeling you'd get more quickly if you had two copies of the A2 allele.

The researchers conducted two behavioral tests to assess both the reinforcing power of food and the pleasure people get from food. One test measured how much food participants ate when it was right in front of them. The second test measured how hard people would work for food, or its "reinforcing power," by testing whether they'd rather earn points to read a newspaper or to eat their favorite food.

The researchers found that both obesity and a copy of the A1 allele were associated with a significantly stronger response to food's reinforcing power; that is, how hard people would work to get the food. There were also three levels of food consumption: people who didn't find food all that rewarding regardless of their genotype ate the least; people who preferred to work for food but didn't have the A1 allele came second; people who were high in food reinforcement and also had the A1 allele ate the most. The theory is that they had to eat more in order to force their paltry number of dopamine receptors into action to produce that feeling of reward.

The same researchers have previously found that chemically manipulating dopamine levels alters eating behavior in overweight men, which leads them to believe that drugs might eventually help prevent obesity. On the other hand, they emphasize that behavior and biology interact and that the A1 gene doesn't necessarily cause obesity, but may contribute to it.

Source: EurekAlert, October 2007


Recommend this Article:

Average Rating:


Recent Related Hot Topics...

"I Don't Live Like I Have Diabetes"

comments 10 comments - 21 Apr 2008

Spencer Helps Me Exercise

comments 1 comment - 8 May 2008


Comments...

Add your comments about this article below. You can add comments as a registered user or anonymously. If you choose to post anonymously your comments will be sent to our moderator for approval before they appear on this page. If you choose to post as a registered user your comments will appear instantly.

When voicing your views via the comment feature, please respect the Diabetes Health community by refraining from comments that could be considered offensive to other people. Diabetes Health reserves the right to remove comments when necessary to maintain the cordial voice of the diabetes community.

For your privacy and protection, we ask that you do not include personal details such as address or telephone number in any comments posted.

Don't have your Diabetes Health Username? Register now and add your comments to all our content.

Posted by anonymous on 29 November 2007

so what is the solution? How can one obtain more dopamine without having to overeat?

Posted by omegaman on 29 November 2007

eat more meat, or more fat. It'll satisfy you longer and rev-up your metabolism. Not all calories are created equal, you know.

Posted by anonymous on 30 November 2007

How do they explain this: When I was young, I could eat whatever I wanted and I never gained weight. Now I can barely eat anything. I have to starve myself and exercise just to maintain my weight. Does aging damage dopamine receptors?

Have Your Say...

Username: Password:
Comment: