Why some people eat but never gain
There are people who need to watch what they eat so as not to put on excess weight and there are also people who can eat what they want and get away with it. A study has found being thin is very much in your genes, so that many people can stay slender with no willpower required. Scientists led by the University of Cambridge have identified a series of genes which may speed up someone’s metabolism or help them burn fat more quickly. These genes were found in more than 1,600 thin but healthy people, including women around a size eight and men with a 35-inch waist. In almost two-thirds of these people, it is believed these genes make them less interested in food.
In 40 per cent of the study group, thin people said they loved food and ate whatever they wanted without putting on weight. Researchers now believe these people have particular genes of their own and are planning a separate study to see what happens in their bodies when they overeat. It could lead to new drugs which mimic the effects of these ‘thinness’ genes and are used to help less lucky people keep the weight off Professor Sadaf Farooqi, senior author of the study from the Wellcome-MRC Institute of Metabolic Science at the University of Cambridge, said they found that there are thin people who are not interested in eating, which may be in their genes.
“This is proof that there are groups of people who really can eat what they
want and stay thin. The research shows for the first time that these healthy
thin people are generally thin because they have a lower burden of genes that
increase a person’s chances of being overweight and not because they are
morally superior.” For the largest ever study of thin people’s genes,
researchers recruited British people who were thin but healthy, without eating
disorders, from GP surgeries. These people needed to be naturally thin, so
anyone who exercised more than three times a week was ruled out. Study
participants, who were mostly in their 40s, also had to have been thin their
whole lives.
The scientists took saliva samples to sequence the genes of the 1,622 thin volunteers, then compared them to more than 10,000 average-weight people and almost 2,000 who were severely obese. They found four new genetic regions linked to thinness and confirmed that another two already found in Asian people are also important in Britain. The study, published in the journal PLOS Genetics, concludes that 18 per cent of thinness is written in our DNA.
The scientists took saliva samples to sequence the genes of the 1,622 thin volunteers, then compared them to more than 10,000 average-weight people and almost 2,000 who were severely obese. They found four new genetic regions linked to thinness and confirmed that another two already found in Asian people are also important in Britain. The study, published in the journal PLOS Genetics, concludes that 18 per cent of thinness is written in our DNA.
It explains why people with two parents who are
naturally thin may have the same body type. The authors confirmed that DNA is
important by giving thin and obese people from the UK Biobank genetic database
‘risk scores’ based on their genes. They found these scores generally correctly
predicted someone’s body size. In the view of Professor Tom Sanders, emeritus
professor of nutrition and Dietetics at King’s College London, “This is an
important and well-conducted study confirming that the precocious severe
obesity is often genetically determined and showing convincingly that those who
very thin are genetically different from the general population. “However, most
obesity is acquired in adult life and is linked to the obesogenic environment
we live in – a sedentary lifestyle and abundant access to calorie-dense foods.”
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