| Anorexic women have much higher levels of a mysterious molecule 
            suspected to affect appetite, researchers have shown for the first 
            time. The peptide, called CART, could be a candidate for new 
            appetite-altering drugs, they say. Levels of CART were 50 per cent higher in blood samples from 
            anorexic women, compared with women without the eating disorder, 
            says Sarah Stanley, an endocrinologist at Imperial College London. 
            CART levels were also found to rise as the women's weight fell. However, the function of CART in humans is not known. "And 
            because we know so little, it is difficult to know if CART is the 
            cause of the weight loss or the result," Stanley told New 
            Scientist. The team, based at Imperial College and the Eating Disorders Unit 
            at London's Maudsley Hospital, will now proceed with experiments 
            giving CART to humans to see if it has a real effect on 
appetite. "Understanding the biology of anorexia nervosa is terribly 
            important and any chink of light that might be shed on it through 
            molecular research is certainly worth pursuing," says Stephen 
            O'Rahilly, an expert in the molecular mechanisms of obesity at the 
            Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, UK. Up and down
 
 CART is made in a variety of places in the human body including 
            the brain, pituitary and adrenal glands. Studies in rats have linked 
            the molecule to appetite. But CART both increases and reduces the 
            appetite in rats, depending on which part of the brain it is 
            injected into. 
              
              
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                |  |  In the latest research, the team measured CART levels in the 
            blood of anorexic women, anorexic women who were in the process of 
            regaining weight, and recovered anorexic women who had maintained a 
            normal body weight for a year. "We found a very, very strong 
            correlation between plasma CART and body mass index," Stanley 
            says. Next, as well as giving CART to people, the team plans to examine 
            CART levels in obese patients and those who have lost their appetite 
            because they have a malignant disease. CART could also be a possible 
            target for obesity drugs if it proves to reduce appetite, says 
            Stanley. "CART is definitely expressed in the appropriate parts of the 
            hypothalamus to be involved," O'Rahilly told New Scientist. 
            "But one should be cautious about leaping immediately to therapeutic 
            applications." For example, it is difficult to know if measurements 
            of CART in the blood reflect the situation in the brain, he 
says. The findings were presented at the British Endocrine Societies 
            annual meeting in Glasgow, UK.  |