I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. This podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public.
Today's episode is mainly going to be focused on how the nervous system, neurons, and some of the cells they collaborate with, like glia and macrophages, how those encourage or can encourage accelerated fat loss, because it turns out they can. Remember, your nervous system, which includes your brain and your spinal cord, and all the connections that they make with the organs of the body, governs everything.
The nervous system and the role of the brain and other neurons has been vastly overlooked in the discussion about losing fat. Now, I would be remiss and I'd probably come under a pretty considerable attack if I didn't just acknowledge upfront a core truth of metabolic science and also of neuroscience, frankly, which is that calories in versus calories out, meaning how many calories you ingest versus how many calories you burn, is the fundamental and most important formula in this business of fat loss and weight management in general.
There's simply no way around the fact that if you ingest far more calories than you burn, you're likely to gain weight, and a good portion of that weight is likely to be adipose tissue, fat. It's also true that if you ingest fewer calories than you burn, that you will lose weight, and that a significant portion of that will come from body fat.
What portion depends on a number of factors, but that simple formula is important. So, a calorie is a calorie as a unit of energy, and we need to accept and acknowledge this calories in, meaning calories ingested versus calories burned formula.
But the calories burned portion is strongly influenced by a number of things that you can control that can greatly accelerate or increase the amount of adipose tissue or the proportion of adipose tissue that you burn in response to exercise and food. Today we're going to talk about the the fact that your body fat of various kinds, and there are several kinds of body fat,
are actually innervated by neurons. Neurons connect to your body fat and can change the probability that that body fat will be burned or not. So your nervous system is the master controller of this process, and it plays a strong role in the calories out, the calories burned component.
Stored fat has two parts that are relevant here. It's got the fatty acid part, and that's the part that your body can use, and that's attached to something called glycerol, and they're linked by a backbone.
To mobilize fat, you got to break the backbone between glycerol and these fatty acids, okay? That's accomplished by an enzyme called lipase, but you can forget all that if you want.
So the first step is to get those fatty acids moving around in the bloodstream, to get them out of those fat cells, and then they can travel and be used for energy. They're going to go into cells that can use them for energy. And once they are inside those cells, they're still not burned up. You need to oxidize them. They need to be moved into the mitochondria, and then they can be converted into ATP, into energy.
So just to really zoom out again to make sure I don't lose anybody, you got to mobilize the fat, then you have to oxidize the fat. And many of the things that the nervous system can do is to increase the mobilization of fat,
but also the oxidation of fat. So what are these neurons that connect to fat doing? What are they releasing exactly? How do they actually increase fat mobilization and how do they increase fat oxidation, burning of fat?
Well, there are a couple of things that they release that encourage that process. And the main one that you need to know about is epinephrine or adrenaline. The conversion of these fatty acids into ATP in the mitochondria of cells is favored by adrenaline.
Adrenaline is released from the adrenal glands, which sit atop our kidneys in our lower back, and it's also released from the so-called sympathetic nervous system, although that name is a bit of a misnomer, because it has nothing to do with sympathy, has to do with stimulating alertness and promoting action of the body.
It was thought for a long time that adrenaline swimming around in your body of when you're fasted, because fasting can increase adrenaline, or when you're engaging in intense exercise, or when you're stressed, is going to promote fat oxidation.
And this is very important because it means that what you do, the specific patterns of movements and the specific environment you create that can stimulate these particular neurons to activate fat, meaning to release fat, to mobilize it, and then to burn it, is going to be a powerful lever that you can use in order to increase fat loss.
Okay, so let's talk about how to activate the nervous system in ways that it promotes more liberation, movement, mobilization of fat and more oxidation of fat. So one of the most powerful ways to stimulate epinephrine, which is also called adrenaline, from these neurons is through movement.
And there are other subtle forms of movement that can greatly increase fat metabolism and fat loss. There was a group in England during the 1960s and 70s that discovered a pathway by which subtle forms of movement can greatly increase fat loss.
And I learned about this early on when I was an undergraduate, and I asked, how did they come across this? And here's how the story goes. They were aware that some people overeat and yet don't put on weight.
Other people overeat even just a little bit, and they seem to accumulate extra adipose tissue. Now, this is long before all the discussions about microbiome and hormone factors and, you know, it's long before many of the hormone factors besides insulin had even been discovered. What they did was they examined people who overate and did not gain weight.
And in 2015 and again in 2017, there have been studies that have have explored this using some modern metabolic tracking. And indeed, simply moving a lot, being a fidgeter, bouncing your knee, standing up and pacing several times or many times throughout the day, led to considerable amounts of fat loss and weight loss when people were ingesting the same amount of food.
If they overate, they were able to compensate and burn off that food. So for people that are overweight, who are kind of averse to exercise, fidgeting might actually be a good entry point. Now,
that's great, and you can think about the protocols, but I want to nest that protocol in what I said before, which is that fat is controlled by these neurons and the epinephrine they release. Those subtle movements of our core musculature,
not just the core, but all our limbs and our musculature, those low-level movements, they trigger epinephrine release from these neurons, and they stimulate the mobilization of fat.
If you're really interested in burning calories and you already exercise, you want to burn more, or you don't have the opportunity to exercise, or you're averse to exercise for whatever reason,
fidgeting, movements, staccato movements, standing up, walking around, pacing, all the sort of nervous activities that we're so critical of in other people and sometimes in ourselves,
the caloric burn from this is considerable, and very likely can offset a, you know, a meal that had excessive calories or a kind of steady state of accumu of eating too much.
And there are several ways that you can use shivering, you can leverage shivering, and you can leverage cold to accelerate fat loss, but you have to do it correctly. And most of the people that are using cold, and frankly, suggesting cold as a means to increase metabolism fat loss,
The paper published in Nature shows that it is shivering itself that causes the brown fat to increase your burning, your burn rate and your metabolism.
And it works like this. When you get into cold and you shiver, the shivering, those that low-level movement of the muscle, those small movements, triggers the release of a molecule called succinate, S U C C I N A T E, succinate. And succinate acts on the brown fat to increase brown fat thermogenesis and fat burning overall.
It turns out that if you want to trigger the shiver, what you want to do is to get into the cold, and then get out of the cold, and typically not dry off,
So what you need to do is find a temperature that you can get into one to five, probably one to three times a week if you really want this to accelerate fat loss.
sometimes called zone two cardio these days on the internet, which is performed continuously for 20 to 60 minutes at moderate intensity of 40 to 60% of VO2 max,
Although low intensity, um, usually means that you could carry on a conversation, or maybe you have to gasp every every few steps or so while trying to talk and run.
Let's ask the question that I think many of people are wondering about, which is, is it better, meaning do you burn more fat if you do your exercise fasted?
So what does this mean? This means if you want to burn more body fat, if it's in your protocols and you're, you know, have been approved to do this safely,
But if you can't even get to the exercise, if you're somebody who just can't do the training at all, you're unwilling to or you're incapable of training,
All of that. But in general, the theme there is very simple, which is that you want insulin levels to be pretty low if your goal is body fat reduction.
If you want to perform really well, you want to you're this is for reasons of performance and you want to, you know, it's for a sport or a competition.
because I do believe that people should look first towards behavioral tools and an understanding of the science before they look toward a a supplement or a particular thing that they can extract from diet.
But there are some compounds that can greatly increase fat oxidation and mobilization, and understanding which compounds increase oxidation or mobilization,
that would have close to a gram of caffeine, which is why if you're a regular caffeine consumer and you don't get that gram of caffeine in your coffee each day, you will get a headache.
Caffeine can enhance the amount of fat that you burn in any duration of exercise, and it can shift the percentage of fat that you oxidize compared to glycogen.
And if caffeine is the kind of the the entry point for most people of using compounds to increase the rate or percentage of fat loss in exercise and even at rest,
They it does seem that they are effective for the treatment of certain kinds of diabetes and lead to fairly significant weight loss and reduction in appetite.
I've talked before my preferred way of eating is to go low or no carbohydrate throughout the day for alertness, to get that adrenaline release and the focus that goes with it, etcetera.
How rather than thinking about cardiovascular or weight training exercise, that we should perhaps look through the lens of this adrenaline system and how it interacts with fat stores.