Gut hormone and brown fat interact to tell the brain it's time to stop eating


Researchers have shown that so-called ‘brown fat’ interacts with the gut hormone secretin in mice to relay nutritional signals about fullness to the brain during a meal. The study bolsters our understanding of a long-suspected role of brown adipose tissue (BAT) – a type of body fat known to generate heat when an animal is cold – in the control of food intake.