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Scientists Identify Natural Hormone That May Reverse Obesity, Study Shows Promising Results - Video
Overview
What if weight loss didn’t mean eating less, but burning more?
A new study suggests that a naturally occurring hormone could reshape how we treat obesity by targeting the brain’s energy-burning circuits rather than simply suppressing appetite. Researchers have found that Fibroblast Growth Factor 21, or FGF21, can reverse obesity in mice by activating a specific pathway in the brain that boosts metabolism.
Unlike popular weight-loss medications such as GLP-1 receptor agonists, which primarily work by reducing hunger and food intake, FGF21 appears to take a different route. It increases how much energy the body burns, essentially helping the body “use up” calories more efficiently.
The research, published in Cell Reports, revealed that FGF21 acts on the hindbrain—a region not traditionally associated with weight regulation. Scientists initially expected the hormone to signal the hypothalamus, the brain’s well-known appetite control center. Instead, they discovered that FGF21 targets areas in the hindbrain, including the nucleus of the solitary tract and the area postrema, which then communicate with other brain regions to regulate metabolism.
This newly identified brain circuit appears to be key to the hormone’s fat-burning effects. By activating this pathway, FGF21 can increase metabolic activity and reduce body weight without necessarily decreasing food intake. This makes it fundamentally different from current treatments and opens the door to alternative strategies for managing obesity.
The implications go beyond weight loss. FGF21-based therapies are already being explored for Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis, a serious form of fatty liver disease linked to obesity and metabolic dysfunction.
However, researchers caution that more studies are needed, especially in humans.
Still, this discovery highlights an exciting possibility: future obesity treatments may not just curb appetite but reprogram how the body burns energy at its core.
REFERENCE: Yunfan Lin, Kristin E. Claflin, Iltan Aklan, Donald A. Morgan, Andrew I. Sullivan, Michael C. Rudolph, Kamal Rahmouni, Matthew J. Potthoff. Pharmacological administration of FGF21 reverses obesity through a parabrachial-projecting neuron population in the hindbrain. Cell Reports, 2026; 45 (4): 117093 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2026.117093


