Mice gain weight from bread without extra calories, study shows

Researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University discovered that mice strongly prefer carbohydrate-rich foods like bread and rice, leading to weight gain even without increased calorie intake. The animals burned less energy, accumulating fat due to metabolic changes. The findings challenge assumptions about carbs and obesity.

A team led by Professor Shigenobu Matsumura at Osaka Metropolitan University's Graduate School of Human Life and Ecology conducted experiments on mice to explore the effects of staple carbohydrates on metabolism and body weight. The mice were offered standard chow alongside options like bread, wheat flour, or rice flour, or combined with high-fat diets. They overwhelmingly chose the carb-rich foods, abandoning their regular diet, yet total calorie consumption remained similar to controls. Despite this, body weight and fat mass increased significantly in groups consuming wheat or rice flour with chow. Mice on high-fat diets with wheat flour gained less weight than those without it, suggesting carbs drive the effect rather than wheat specifically. Professor Matsumura stated, 'These findings suggest that weight gain may not be due to wheat-specific effects, but rather to a strong preference for carbohydrates and the associated metabolic changes.' Indirect calorimetry revealed reduced energy expenditure as the key factor, not overeating. Blood tests showed elevated fatty acids and depleted essential amino acids, while livers accumulated fat with upregulated genes for fatty acid production and transport. Removing wheat flour rapidly reversed weight gain and metabolic issues. The study appears in Molecular Nutrition & Food Research. Professor Matsumura plans human trials to assess if these carb-induced changes apply beyond mice, including effects of whole grains, fiber, proteins, fats, processing, and meal timing.

Relaterede artikler

Illustration of a lab mouse showing brain changes from childhood junk food diet, with helpful bacteria depicted.
Billede genereret af AI

Childhood junk food may leave lasting changes in brain circuits that guide eating, mouse study suggests

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI Faktatjekket

Researchers at APC Microbiome Ireland at University College Cork report that early-life exposure to a high-fat, high-sugar diet altered feeding behavior and appetite-related brain pathways in mice into adulthood, even after the animals returned to a standard diet and normal body weight. The team also found that a specific Bifidobacterium strain and a prebiotic fiber mix helped mitigate some of these long-term effects.

Researchers at Vrije Universiteit Brussel have found that sourdough fermentation activates enzymes in wheat to break down arabinoxylans, influencing bread texture, digestibility and flavor. The study highlights how acidity drives this process more than microbes. Specific bacteria contribute to distinctive tastes like buttery aromas.

Rapporteret af AI

New research published in Nature Medicine reveals that people with prediabetes can normalize blood sugar levels without losing weight. About one in four participants in lifestyle programs achieved this remission, offering protection against diabetes similar to weight loss methods. The key factors involve fat distribution and certain hormones.

Researchers have uncovered links between microbes in the mouth and metabolic conditions like obesity, pre-diabetes, and fatty liver disease. The study analyzed oral swabs from over 9,000 participants using advanced sequencing techniques. Experts suggest these findings could lead to simple swab-based screenings.

Rapporteret af AI

Researchers have identified a previously unknown signaling network between the gut and brain that detects protein shortages and shifts feeding preferences toward essential amino acids.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis