Bread's Hidden Weight Gain Secret: Carbs Slow Metabolism, Study Finds

A new study from Osaka Metropolitan University reveals that a preference for carbohydrates like bread and rice can lead to weight gain even without consuming extra calories. Researchers found mice strongly favored these foods, abandoned their regular diet, and gained body fat because their metabolism slowed, burning less energy. Analysis showed higher blood fatty acids, lower amino acids, and increased liver fat accumulation in the mice. The lead researcher states the findings suggest weight gain is driven by metabolic changes from carb preference, not overeating, and plans to verify these effects in human dietary studies.

Key Points: Study: Bread Causes Weight Gain Without Extra Calories

  • Mice strongly preferred carbs over standard food
  • Weight gain occurred without increased calorie intake
  • Metabolism slowed, reducing energy expenditure
  • Liver showed increased fat accumulation and gene changes
  • Effects reversed when wheat was removed from diet
4 min read

Study finds out why bread can cause weight gain without extra calories

New research reveals how carb preference leads to weight gain by slowing metabolism, not overeating. Learn the science behind bread and body fat.

"Weight gain may not be due to wheat-specific effects, but rather to a strong preference for carbohydrates and the associated metabolic changes. - Professor Shigenobu Matsumura"

Washington DC, April 15

Bread and other carbohydrate staples may be doing more than just filling plates--they could be quietly reshaping metabolism. In a surprising twist, researchers found that mice strongly preferred carbs like bread, rice, and wheat, abandoning their regular diet entirely.

Even without eating more calories, they gained weight and body fat, not because they overate, but because their bodies burned less energy.

Bread has long been a dietary cornerstone, sustaining societies for generations. It is deeply woven into everyday life. But with obesity rates continuing to climb, researchers are beginning to question whether this reliance on staple carbohydrates still makes sense in modern diets.

Obesity increases the risk of many lifestyle-related diseases, making prevention a major public health priority. Traditionally, research has focused on high fat consumption as the main driver of weight gain. This is why many animal studies rely on high fat diets.

However, carbohydrates such as bread, rice, and noodles are consumed daily around the world, yet their role in obesity and metabolism has not been explored as thoroughly.

While many people believe that "bread makes you gain weight" or that "carbohydrates should be limited," it has been unclear whether the issue lies in the foods themselves or in how people choose and consume them.

Study Explores Carb Preference and Metabolic Effects

To better understand these questions, a research team led by Professor Shigenobu Matsumura at Osaka Metropolitan University's Graduate School of Human Life and Ecology studied how carbohydrates influence eating behavior and metabolism in mice.

The researchers examined whether mice preferred foods like wheat, bread, and rice over standard chow, and how these choices affected body weight and energy use. The animals were divided into several feeding groups, including Chow, Chow + Bread, Chow + Wheat flour, Chow + Rice flour, High-fat diet (HFD) + Chow, and HFD + Wheat flour. The team tracked changes in body weight, energy expenditure, blood metabolites, and liver gene expression.

Carb Preference Linked to Weight Gain Without More Calories

The findings showed that mice strongly favored carbohydrate-rich foods and stopped eating their standard chow altogether. Even though their total calorie intake did not increase significantly, both body weight and fat mass went up.

Mice that consumed rice flour gained weight in a similar way to those that ate wheat flour. In contrast, mice given a High-fat diet (HFD) + Wheat flour gained less weight than those on a High-fat diet (HFD) + Chow.

"These findings suggest that weight gain may not be due to wheat-specific effects, but rather to a strong preference for carbohydrates and the associated metabolic changes," said Professor Matsumura.

Slower Energy Use May Drive Weight Gain

The team also used indirect calorimetry with respiratory gas analysis to better understand energy use. The results showed that weight gain was not caused by "overeating," but by a reduction in energy expenditure.

Further analysis revealed higher levels of fatty acids in the blood and lower levels of essential amino acids. In the liver, fat accumulation increased, along with the activity of genes linked to fatty acid production and lipid transport.

When wheat flour was removed from the diet, both body weight and metabolic abnormalities improved quickly. This suggests that moving away from a wheat-heavy diet and toward a more balanced one may help regulate body weight more effectively.

Next Steps: Applying Findings to Human Diets

"Going forward, we plan to shift our research focus to humans to verify the extent to which the metabolic changes identified in this study apply to actual dietary habits," stated Professor Matsumura.

"We also intend to investigate how factors such as whole grains, unrefined grains, and foods rich in dietary fiber, as well as their combinations with proteins and fats, food processing methods, and timing of consumption, affect metabolic responses to carbohydrate intake. In the future, we hope this will serve as a scientific foundation for achieving a balance between "taste" and "health" in the fields of nutritional guidance, food education, and food development," added Matsumura.

The findings were published in Molecular Nutrition & Food Research.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
So it's not just about calories in vs calories out. Our bodies literally slow down when we eat too many carbs? 😳 This explains why my weight loss plateaued even on a 1500-calorie diet full of chapatis. Time to add more dal and veggies to the plate.
D
David E
As someone living in India for work, I've noticed the heavy reliance on rice and bread. This study makes sense. The key takeaway is "balance." You can't have a thali that's 70% rice and 30% everything else. Portion control and variety are crucial.
A
Ananya R
Respectfully, we must be careful applying mouse studies directly to humans. Our traditional diets evolved over millennia. The issue is modern processing, sedentary lifestyles, and sugar, not the humble chapati. Let's not villainize our staple foods based on one study.
K
Karthik V
The preference part is so true! Give me a basket of garlic naan and I'll forget the sabzi exists 😂. But seriously, this is a wake-up call. Maybe we should follow the South Indian model more - smaller portions of rice with lots of sambar, rasam, and curd.
S
Sarah B
Interesting research. It aligns with low-carb trends, but the solution isn't to eliminate carbs entirely. The professor's next steps are key—studying whole grains and fiber. A bowl of dalia or oats is not the same as white bread. Quality matters.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50