Realistic illustration of obese mouse with FGF19 hormone pathway from gut to brain activating fat-burning brown adipose tissue for thermogenesis and obesity treatment research.
Image generated by AI

FGF19 hormone activates brain pathway to boost fat burning in obese mice

Image generated by AI
Fact checked

A study in obese mice has found that the gut-derived hormone FGF19 can signal the brain to increase energy expenditure and activate fat-burning cells. Acting through the hypothalamus and the sympathetic nervous system, this mechanism enhances thermogenesis and cold tolerance and may help guide new treatments for obesity and diabetes.

Researchers at the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) in Brazil report that the hormone FGF19 influences energy metabolism by acting on the hypothalamus, a brain region that coordinates responses to signals from the body and the environment.

In the study, diet-induced obese mice received FGF19 directly into the brain. According to the paper in the American Journal of Physiology – Endocrinology and Metabolism, central FGF19 signaling boosted sympathetic nervous system activity, increased energy expenditure and stimulated thermogenesis in brown and inguinal (white) adipose tissue, leading fat cells to burn energy as heat rather than store calories. The obese mice showed improved overall energy homeostasis, reduced peripheral inflammation, better glucose–insulin control and greater tolerance to cold exposure.

The work builds on earlier research showing that FGF19, produced mainly in the small intestine, regulates bile acids as well as glucose and lipid metabolism in the liver, while highlighting its less-explored effects in the brain. The authors found that exposure to cold upregulated receptors and coreceptors for FGF19 specifically in the hypothalamus, suggesting an adaptive role in thermoregulation and energy balance.

“FGF19 had already been linked to a reduction in food intake. Our work broke new ground by showing that it also plays an important role by acting on the hypothalamus and stimulating an increase in energy expenditure in white and brown adipose tissue. In other words, in addition to controlling appetite, it stimulates thermogenesis. So, in terms of therapy associated with obesity, it’d make a lot of sense,” said Professor Helena Cristina de Lima Barbosa, from the Obesity and Comorbidities Research Center (OCRC) at UNICAMP, in remarks reported by FAPESP.

The study, led by doctoral student Lucas Zangerolamo under Barbosa’s supervision, was funded by the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) and involved collaboration with the Joslin Diabetes Center at Harvard Medical School, where co-author Yu‑Hua Tseng is based. To map which brain cells could respond to FGF19, the team compiled and analyzed public single-cell RNA sequencing datasets from the adult mouse hypothalamus. They evaluated transcription in more than 50,000 individual cells to identify specific hypothalamic populations expressing FGF19 receptors.

The authors say a next step is to understand how to stimulate the body to increase its own production of FGF19 and to clarify how this pathway intersects with diet-induced brain inflammation and neural circuits that regulate eating behavior.

The findings come as obesity continues to rise worldwide. The World Atlas of Obesity 2025 estimates that more than 1 billion people are currently living with obesity and projects that, without stronger prevention and treatment measures, this number could exceed 1.5 billion by 2030.

The research, published in American Journal of Physiology – Endocrinology and Metabolism and highlighted by the journal earlier this year, suggests that drugs designed to mimic FGF19’s action in the brain and adipose tissue could one day complement existing hormone-based therapies for obesity and diabetes. Current medicines such as Ozempic, which contains semaglutide, work by activating GLP‑1 receptors to send satiety signals to the brain and reduce food intake; the new work points to FGF19 as a potential target for therapies that also directly increase energy expenditure.

Related Articles

Realistic illustration of mouse gut microbiome metabolites traveling to liver, impacting energy and insulin for obesity-diabetes research.
Image generated by AI

Harvard-led study maps gut metabolites that may shape obesity and diabetes risk

Reported by AI Image generated by AI Fact checked

Researchers working at Harvard University and collaborators in Brazil have identified metabolites produced by gut bacteria that travel through the portal vein to the liver and appear to influence energy use and insulin sensitivity in mice. The findings, published in Cell Metabolism, suggest possible new strategies for preventing or treating obesity and type 2 diabetes by targeting gut–liver communication.([sciencedaily.com](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251214100926.htm?utm_source=openai))

Weight loss reversed obesity-related glucose problems in both young and mid-aged mice, but researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev report that, in mid-aged animals, early weight loss coincided with a temporary rise in inflammation-related changes in the hypothalamus, a brain region involved in appetite and energy regulation.

Reported by AI Fact checked

Scientists are probing brain circuits affected by GLP-1 medicines such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, and Zepbound to preserve weight-loss benefits while curbing nausea. The findings, presented at Neuroscience 2025, outline strategies that could refine treatments for obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Researchers have shown that a helper protein called MRAP2 is crucial for the function of an appetite‑related receptor known as MC3R. The study, led by the University of Birmingham and published in Science Signaling, helps explain how genetic mutations in MRAP2 found in some people with obesity can weaken cellular signaling involved in energy balance, offering clues for future treatments.

Reported by AI Fact checked

Researchers at the University of California, Riverside report that fat-derived molecules called oxylipins, formed from linoleic acid in soybean oil, are linked to weight gain in mice on a high-fat diet. The work, published in the Journal of Lipid Research, suggests that these compounds can promote inflammation and alter liver metabolism, helping explain why soybean oil-rich diets appear more obesogenic than some other fats in animal studies.

Scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory have found that breast cancer quickly disrupts the brain's internal clock in mice, flattening daily stress hormone cycles and impairing immune responses. Remarkably, restoring these rhythms in specific brain neurons shrank tumors without any drugs. The discovery highlights how early physiological imbalances may worsen cancer outcomes.

Reported by AI

Researchers have engineered a protein that detects subtle glutamate signals between neurons, unveiling a previously hidden aspect of brain communication. This tool allows real-time observation of how brain cells process incoming information, potentially advancing studies on learning, memory, and neurological disorders. The findings, published in Nature Methods, highlight a breakthrough in neuroscience.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline