Genetically Driven: Mutation shows up in binge eaters
By Nathan Seppa
Overweight binge eaters are more likely to harbor a genetic mutation that disrupts brain signals governing satiety than are people of normal weight or obese people who don’t regularly eat far more food than is needed to satisfy hunger, researchers report. The finding suggests that disruption of a particular gene underlies some binge eating, which until now has been classified as a psychiatric disorder. Another study shows that up to 6 percent of childhood obesity might stem from an inherited mutation in this gene.
Previous studies in animals associated binge eating with a mutation of the gene for a brain protein called melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R). To test the effect of this gene defect on human behavior, Fritz F. Horber of the Hirslanden Clinic in Zurich and his colleagues obtained blood samples from 469 severely obese volunteers, average age 41. Genetic analysis of their blood revealed that 24 carried a mutated gene for MC4R.