Researchers, including those from University of California, Berkeley in the US found that obese mice who lost their sense of smell also lost weight on a high fat diet.
The slimmed-down but smell-deficient mice ate the same amount of fatty food as mice that retained their sense of smell and ballooned to twice their normal weight, they said.
The team also found that mice with a boosted sense of smell - super-smellers - got even fatter on a high-fat diet than did mice with normal smell.
Sensory systems play a role in metabolism. Weight gain is not purely a measure of the calories taken in, it is also related to how those calories are perceived, they said.
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"This paper is one of the first studies that really shows if we manipulate olfactory inputs we can actually alter how the brain perceives energy balance, and how the brain regulates energy balance," said Celine Riera, a fellow at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre in Los Angeles in the US.
While searching for food, the body stores calories in case it is unsuccessful. Once food is secured, the body feels free to burn it.
Researchers used gene therapy to destroy olfactory neurons in the noses of adult mice but spare stem cells, so that the animals lost their sense of smell only temporarily - for about three weeks - before the olfactory neurons regrew.
The team noted that the mice turned their beige fat cells - the subcutaneous fat storage cells that accumulate around our thighs and midriffs - into brown fat cells, which burn fatty acids to produce heat.
Some turned almost all of their beige fat into brown fat, becoming lean, mean burning machines.
In these mice, white fat cells - the storage cells that cluster around our internal organs and are associated with poor health outcomes - also shrank in size.
The study was published this week in the journal Cell Metabolism.
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