Dopamino genetinė rizika yra susijusi su priklausomybe nuo maisto ir kūno masės, nes sumažėja su atsipalaidavimu susijęs ventralinis striatumas (2018).

Apetitas. 2018 spalio 5. pii: S0195-6663 (17) 31900-1. doi: 10.1016 / j.appet.2018.09.010.

Romer AL1, Su Kang M2, Nikolova YS3, Gearhardt AN4, Hariri AR5.

Abstraktus

The prevalence rate of obesity continues to rise in the U.S., but effective treatment options remain elusive resulting in increased emphasis on prevention. One such area of prevention research capitalizes on the relatively novel behavioral construct of food addiction, which has been implicated in obesity. Food addiction reflects an individual’s propensity for compulsive eating despite negative consequences, and shares not only symptoms with both eating and substance use disorders but also genetic and neural correlates within neural reward-circuitry modulated by dopamine. Here, we examined associations between food addiction scores, body mass index (BMI), reward-related ventral striatum activity, and a polygenic score approximating dopamine signaling in 115 non-Hispanic Caucasian young adult university students. As predicted, polygenic dopamine scores were related to ventral striatum activity, which in turn was associated with higher food addiction scores. In addition, food addiction was related to BMI. An exploratory post-hoc path analysis further indicated that polygenic scores were indirectly related to both food addiction and BMI, in part, through ventral striatum activity. Collectively, our results provide evidence supporting the utility of food addiction in weight gain prevention research by establishing links with known risk-related neural and genetic biomarkers.

ŽODŽIAI: BMI; Dopamine; Food addiction; Obesity; Ventral striatum

PMID: 30296504

DOI: 10.1016 / j.appet.2018.09.010