Home » Psychology news » Gut hormone and brown fat interact to tell the brain it’s time to stop eating
Gut hormone and brown fat interact to tell the brain it’s time to stop eating
November 15, 2018 by NewsBot
Researchers have shown that so-called 'brown fat' interacts with the gut hormone secretin in mice to relay nutritional signals about fullness to the brain during a meal. The study bolsters our understanding of a long-suspected role of brown adipose tissue (BAT) -- a type of body fat known to generate heat when an animal is cold -- in the control of food intake.