Faculty of Science and Medicine, Department of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Cardiovascular System, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Obes Rev. 2021 Mar;22 Suppl 2:e13189. doi: 10.1111/obr.13189. Epub 2021 Feb 5.
Since its publication in 1950, the Biology of Human Starvation, which describes the classic longitudinal Minnesota Experiment of semistarvation and refeeding in healthy young men, has been the undisputed source of scientific reference about the impact of long-term food deprivation on human physiology and behavior. It has been a guide in developing famine and refugee relief programs for international agencies, in exploring the effects of food deprivation on the cognitive and social functioning of those with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, and in gaining insights into metabolic adaptations that undermine obesity therapy and cachexia rehabilitation. In more recent decades, the application of a systems approach to the analysis of its data on longitudinal changes in body composition, basal metabolic rate, and food intake during the 24 weeks of semistarvation and 20 weeks of refeeding has provided rare insights into the multitude of control systems that govern the regulation of body composition during weight regain. These have underscored an internal (autoregulatory) control of lean-fat partitioning (highly sensitive to initial adiposity), which operates during weight loss and weight regain and revealed the existence of feedback loops between changes in body composition and the control of food intake and adaptive thermogenesis for the purpose of accelerating the recovery of fat mass and fat-free mass. This paper highlights the general features and design of this grueling experiment of simulated famine that has allowed the unmasking of fundamental control systems in human body composition autoregulation. The integration of its outcomes constitutes the "famine reactions" that drive the normal physiology of weight regain and obesity relapse and provides a mechanistic "autoregulation-based" explanation of how dieting and weight cycling, transition to sedentarity, or developmental programming may predispose to obesity. It also provides a system physiology framework for research toward elucidating proteinstatic and adipostatic mechanisms that control hunger-appetite and adaptive thermogenesis, with major implications for a better understanding (and management) of cachexia, obesity, and cardiometabolic diseases.
自 1950 年出版以来,《人类饥饿的生物学》描述了经典的明尼苏达州长期半饥饿和重新喂养健康年轻男性的实验,它一直是关于长期食物剥夺对人类生理和行为影响的科学参考的无可争议的来源。它为国际机构制定饥荒和难民救援计划提供了指导,探索了食物剥夺对神经性厌食症和神经性贪食症患者认知和社会功能的影响,并深入了解了破坏肥胖症治疗和恶病质康复的代谢适应。在最近几十年,系统方法应用于分析其关于 24 周半饥饿和 20 周重新喂养期间身体成分、基础代谢率和食物摄入的纵向变化的数据,为控制体重恢复期间身体成分调节的众多控制系统提供了难得的见解。这些强调了控制瘦脂分配的内部(自调节)控制(对初始肥胖高度敏感),该控制在减肥和体重恢复期间起作用,并揭示了身体成分变化与控制食物摄入和适应性生热之间的反馈回路的存在,目的是加速脂肪质量和无脂肪质量的恢复。本文重点介绍了这项模拟饥荒的艰苦实验的一般特征和设计,该实验揭示了人体成分自调节的基本控制系统。其结果的整合构成了“饥荒反应”,推动了体重恢复和肥胖复发的正常生理学,并提供了节食和体重循环、向久坐生活方式转变或发育编程如何导致肥胖的机制“基于自调节”的解释。它还为阐明控制饥饿-食欲和适应性生热的蛋白质稳定和脂肪稳定机制的研究提供了系统生理学框架,对更好地理解(和管理)恶病质、肥胖和心血管代谢疾病具有重要意义。