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UK: Mystery of the munchies solved

Ian Sample

The Guardian

Thursday 22 Dec 2005

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The mystery of the munchies, the craving for food experienced by
cannabis users, has been unravelled. Neuroscientists hope that by
piecing together the brain circuits involved in switching on the urge to
eat they will be able to identify ways to block the craving with new
anti-obesity drugs.

David Talmage's team at Columbia University, New York, whose work
appears in the journal Neuron, took slices from parts of the mouse brain
called the lateral hypothalamus, known to regulate appetite. They then
used ultra-slim electrodes to measure the electrical activity along
single neurons. Cannabis produces a "high" thanks to an active
ingredient called tetrahydrocannabinol, but a similar chemical or
cannabinoid is also produced naturally in the body. The researchers
found that when neurons were exposed to the natural cannabinoid they
became more excitable.

Article continues
The researchers then tested neurons from mice bred to lack an
appetite-suppressing hormone, leptin. They found that when these neurons
were exposed to the natural cannabinoid they were even more excitable.
The researchers believe leptin suppresses appetite by "short-circuiting"
the effect of cannabinoids by changing how calcium ions flow along
neurons. Calcium is needed to make cannabinoids in the body.

"What this gives us is a neural circuit for the well-known munchies
effect that makes you hungry," said Dr Talmage.

 

 

 

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