Science

New research shows how specific odors can turn fat storage on or off

New research shows how specific odors can turn fat storage on or off
Baylor research has identified the pathways through which the presence or absence of certain smells can trigger or switch off fat storage in the intestines
New research has identified the pathways through which the presence or absence of certain smells can trigger or switch off fat storage in the intestines
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Cartoon image showing the effect of scents on lipid storage in the laboratory worm C. elegans.
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Cartoon image showing the effect of scents on lipid storage in the laboratory worm C. elegans.
Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy image of the worm C. elegans. The image shows fat storage tissue – yellow pixels show high fat levels – with the olfactory AWC neuron pseudo-colored in blue. In the background are the chemical structures of different odorants.
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Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy image of the worm C. elegans. The image shows fat storage tissue – yellow pixels show high fat levels – with the olfactory AWC neuron pseudo-colored in blue. In the background are the chemical structures of different odorants.
Baylor research has identified the pathways through which the presence or absence of certain smells can trigger or switch off fat storage in the intestines
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New research has identified the pathways through which the presence or absence of certain smells can trigger or switch off fat storage in the intestines
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Olfactory signals can switch fat storage mechanisms on and off without having any effect on appetite or eating habits, says a Baylor research team that's traced the way olfactory nerves regulate fat metabolism in C. elegans worms.

The worms were chosen due to the simplicity of their olfactory systems. C. elegans carry just three pairs of olfactory neurons, using combinations of them to detect a small range of smells that are handy for worms. The human system is similar in structure but vastly more complex, with somewhere between 10 and 20 million olfactory receptor neurons, and can distinguish between a much broader palette of scents fair and foul.

The research team, led by Dr. Ayse Sena Mutlu, a postdoctoral fellow at Baylor's Huffington Center on Aging, used optogenic light stimulation to activate individual smell neurons in the worms, tracing the effects through selective neural circuits to neuroendocrine pathways that control fat storage mechanisms in the intestine.

Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy image of the worm C. elegans. The image shows fat storage tissue – yellow pixels show high fat levels – with the olfactory AWC neuron pseudo-colored in blue. In the background are the chemical structures of different odorants.
Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy image of the worm C. elegans. The image shows fat storage tissue – yellow pixels show high fat levels – with the olfactory AWC neuron pseudo-colored in blue. In the background are the chemical structures of different odorants.

Placed alongside a group of untreated control worms, the nerve-stimulated worms showed no significant difference in the amounts they ate, moved or defecated, but showed significantly changed fat content levels in their anterior intestine, indicating that the presence or absence of certain smells had the power to control fat metabolism.

We may have to watch not only what we eat, but what we smell

"Although more research is needed, it is possible that certain scents might trigger changes in fat metabolism resulting in weight loss," said Dr. Meng Wang, professor of molecular and human genetics, a member of the Huffington Center On Aging and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Baylor. "We may have to watch not only what we eat, but what we smell."

The research, said Dr. Mutlu, also pointed to a possible mechanism for the link between neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimers and obesity, if the degeneration of olfactory nerves causes them to stop sending critical messages to the gut.

The research was published in Nature Communications.

Source: Baylor College of Medicine

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2 comments
2 comments
Ichabod Ebenezer
So, at the risk of assuming the worm study applies to humans as well, you are saying I should strap kale to my nose while I eat my next burger. Is that about right?
guzmanchinky
Ichabod, that was hilarious. But yes, I would love to see some kind of "diet smell"...