Compulsive
Eating shares same Addictive Biochemical
Mechanism with Cocaine, Heroin Abuse
Newswise
— In a newly published study, scientists
from The Scripps Research Institute have
shown for the first time that the same
molecular mechanisms that drive people into
drug addiction are behind the compulsion to
overeat, pushing people into obesity.
The new study, conducted by Scripps Research Associate
Professor Paul J. Kenny and graduate student
Paul M. Johnson, was published March 28,
2010 in an advance online edition of the
journal Nature Neuroscience.
The study’s startling findings received widespread
publicity after a preliminary abstract was
presented at a Society for Neuroscience
meeting in Chicago last October.
Articles heralding the new discovery appeared in news
publications around the world, focusing on
the point obese patients have been making
for years – that, like addiction to other
substances, junk food binging is extremely
difficult to stop.
The study goes significantly further than the abstract,
however, demonstrating clearly that in rat
models the development of obesity coincides
with a progressively deteriorating chemical
balance in reward brain circuitries.
As these pleasure centers in the brain become less and less
responsive, rats quickly develop compulsive
overeating habits, consuming larger
quantities of high-calorie, high-fat foods
until they become obese.
The very same changes occur in the brains of rats that
overconsume cocaine or heroin, and are
thought to play an important role in the
development of compulsive drug use.
Kenny, a scientist at Scripps Research’s Florida campus,
said that the study, which took nearly three
years to complete, confirms the “addictive”
properties of junk food.
“The new study, unlike our preliminary abstract, explains
what happens in the brain of these animals
when they have easy access to high-calorie,
high-fat food,” said Kenny.
“It presents the most thorough and compelling evidence that
drug addiction and obesity are based on the
same underlying neurobiological mechanisms.
In the study, the animals completely lost
control over their eating behavior, the
primary hallmark of addiction.
"They continued to overeat even when they anticipated
receiving electric shocks, highlighting just
how motivated they were to consume the
palatable food.”
The scientists fed the rats a diet modeled after the type
that contributes to human
obesity—easy-to-obtain high-calorie,
high-fat foods like sausage, bacon, and
cheesecake. Soon after the experiments
began, the animals began to bulk up
dramatically.
“They always went for the worst types of food,” Kenny said,
“and as a result, they took in twice the
calories as the control rats. When we
removed the junk food and tried to put them
on a nutritious diet – what we called the
‘salad bar option’ – they simply refused to
eat.
"The change in their diet preference was so great that they
basically starved themselves for two weeks
after they were cut off from junk food. It
was the animals that showed the “crash” in
brain reward circuitries that had the most
profound shift in food preference to the
palatable, unhealthy diet. These same rats
were also those that kept on eating even
when they anticipated being shocked.”
Lethally Simple
What happens in addiction is lethally simple, Kenny
explained. The reward pathways in the brain
have been so overstimulated that the system
basically turns on itself, adapting to the
new reality of addiction, whether its
cocaine or cupcakes.
“The body adapts remarkably well to change—and that’s the
problem,” said Kenny. “When the animal
overstimulates its brain pleasure centers
with highly palatable food, the systems
adapt by decreasing their activity.
"However, now the animal requires constant stimulation from
palatable food to avoid entering a
persistent state of negative reward”.
After showing that obese rats had clear addiction-like food
seeking behaviors, Johnson and Kenny next
investigated the underlying molecular
mechanisms that may explain these changes.
They focused on a particular receptor in the brain known to
play an important role in vulnerability to
drug addiction and obesity – the dopamine D2
receptor.
The D2 receptor responds to dopamine, a neurotransmitter
that is released in the brain by pleasurable
experiences like food or sex or drugs like
cocaine. In cocaine abuse, for example, the
drug alter the flow of dopamine by blocking
its retrieval, flooding the brain and
overstimulating the receptors, something
that eventually leads to physical changes in
the way the brain responds to the drug.
The new study shows that the same thing happens in junk
food addiction.
“These findings confirm what we and many others have
suspected,” Kenny said, “that
overconsumption of highly pleasurable food
triggers addiction-like neuroadaptive
responses in brain reward circuitries,
driving the development of compulsive
eating.
"Common mechanisms may therefore underlie obesity and drug
addiction.”
Consistent with common mechanisms explaining addiction and
obesity, levels of the D2 dopamine receptors
were significantly reduced in the brains of
the obese animals, similar to previous
reports of what happens in human drug
addicts, Kenny noted.
Remarkably, when the scientists knocked down the
receptor using a specialized virus, the
development of addiction-like eating was
dramatically accelerated.
“This addiction-like behavior happened almost from the
moment we knocked down the dopamine
receptors,” Kenny noted.
“The very next day after we provided access to the
palatable food, their brains changed into a
state that was consistent with an animal
that had been overeating for several weeks.
"The animals also became compulsive in their eating
behaviors almost immediately. These data
are, as far as we know, the strongest
support for the idea that overeating of
palatable food can become habitual in the
same manner and through the same mechanisms
as consumption of drugs of abuse.”
The study, “Addiction-Like Reward Dysfunction and
Compulsive Eating in Obese Rats: Role for
Dopamine D2 Receptors,” was supported by a
Bank of America Fellowship, The Margaret Q.
Landenberger Research Foundation and the
National Institutes of Health.
About The Scripps Research Institute
The Scripps Research Institute is one of the world's
largest independent, non-profit biomedical
research organizations, at the forefront of
basic biomedical science that seeks to
comprehend the most fundamental processes of
life.
Scripps Research is internationally recognized for
its discoveries in immunology, molecular and
cellular biology, chemistry, neurosciences,
autoimmune, cardiovascular, and infectious
diseases, and synthetic vaccine development.
Established in its current configuration in 1961, it
employs approximately 3,000 scientists,
postdoctoral fellows, scientific and other
technicians, doctoral degree graduate
students, and administrative and technical
support personnel. Scripps Research is
headquartered in La Jolla, California.
It also includes Scripps Florida, whose researchers focus
on basic biomedical science, drug discovery,
and technology development. Scripps Florida
is located in Jupiter, Florida.
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