The Guardian (USA)

Worms crave junk food after consuming cannabis, study suggests

- Matthew Weaver

It is not just humans that get the munchies: worms also display the same craving for their favourite snacks after consuming cannabis, new research has found.

In the study, published in the journal Current Biology, researcher­s managed to simulate worms getting stoned by soaking them in cannabinoi­d.

It is not known whether the worms got high, but they did display a stronger preference for higher-calorie foods, just as humans crave junk food after taking cannabis.

The finding suggests that cannabis can interfere with an important mechanism that helps regulate appetite, the study concluded.

Cannabinoi­ds are known to act by binding to proteins in the brain, nervous system and other parts of the body called cannabinoi­d receptors. If cannabinoi­ds contain a chemical known as THC, it can induce feelings of relaxation and contentmen­t.

Normally, these receptors respond to cannabinoi­ds that are naturally present in the body, known as endocannab­inoids. The endocannab­inoid system plays important roles in eating, anxiety, learning and memory, reproducti­on and metabolism.

Shawn Lockery, one of the authors of the study and a professor of biology and neuroscien­ce at the University of Oregon in the US, said: “Cannabinoi­d signalling is present in the majority of tissues in our body. It therefore could be involved in the cause and treatment of a wide range of diseases.”

For the study, the scientists soaked the worms in anandamide, an endocannab­inoid.

It is thought that worms find highcalori­e food more desirable, and actively seek it out. When soaked in anandamide, that preference became stronger, the researcher­s said, adding that the worms flocked to the food and stayed there longer than usual.

Lockery said: “We suggest that this increase in existing preference is analogous to eating more of the foods you would crave anyway. It’s like choosing pizza versus oatmeal.”

The researcher­s said the study suggested that worms could be used in testing and screening drugs for human use.

Lockery said: “The fact that the human cannabinoi­d receptor gene is functional in C. elegans food-choice experiment­s sets the stage for rapid and inexpensiv­e screening for drugs that target a wide variety of proteins involved in cannabinoi­d signalling and metabolism, with profound implicatio­ns for human health.”

 ?? Photograph: Stacy Levichev/University of Oregon/PA ?? Fluorescen­t green dots in a worm reveal neurons that respond to cannabinoi­ds. The scientists soaked the worms in anandamide, an endocannab­inoid.
Photograph: Stacy Levichev/University of Oregon/PA Fluorescen­t green dots in a worm reveal neurons that respond to cannabinoi­ds. The scientists soaked the worms in anandamide, an endocannab­inoid.

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