Saturday Star

QUIRK IN DNA WHICH KEEPS YOU SKINNY

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BEING able to eat as much cake as you want without putting on weight may not just be down to luck.

Scientists believe they have discovered a gene linked to thinness.

Some people have a biological quirk meaning this gene does not work properly and so are believed to burn fat at a greater rate, thus keeping them slim.

To find the gene, researcher­s trawled through a database of more than 47 000 people, comparing the DNA of those who were a normal weight with those who were naturally thin.

They wanted to know what skinny people, who were not athletes and did not suffer from an eating disorder, had in common. The answer is a quirk in part of the DNA called the ALK gene.

When the scientists removed this gene from mice, they could feed them a high-fat diet without causing the animals to pile on the weight.

The result could lead to a slimming pill in as little as four years. The study’s senior author, Professor Josef Penninger of the University of British Columbia in Canada, said: “We know this gene is druggable, so there could well be a pill in future which people could take to get the same effect.”

Experts believe less than 1% of the population have the version of the ALK gene linked to thinness. It means they have a biological difference which stops the gene working properly and may keep them slim.

After finding the gene in a database of people aged 20 to 44 in Estonia, researcher­s tested how it worked on mice.

They took gene-edited mice without the ALK gene and compared them with regular counterpar­ts. The study, published in the journal Cell, found mice missing the gene had smaller fat cells.

They had higher levels of an enzyme which causes fat to be burned off quicker – as did 30 of the naturally thin people.

Knocking out the gene kick-starts a circuit in the brain which tells fat in the body to burn more calories, the authors believe.

Drugs already exist which do this, because the ALK gene is also linked to cancer.

Therefore it might be possible to develop a new drug to block the gene to help people keep weight off. Professor Penninger said: “It’s targetable. We could possibly inhibit ALK, and we actually will try to do this in the future.” | Daily Mail

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