
Food Junkies Podcast Episode 265: Prof. Dr. Ferdinand von Meyenn - Why Fat Cells Remember Obesity
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Jan 22, 2026 Join Ferdinand von Meyenn, an Assistant Professor at ETH Zurich and expert in metabolic epigenetics, as he unravels the mystery of why fat cells remember obesity. Discover how epigenetic changes can persist after weight loss, making it easier to regain weight. He discusses the significance of maternal effects, the durability of adipose memory, and the role of diet in shaping these changes. The conversation also touches on inflammation's role in weight regulation and why prevention and compassion are crucial for addressing obesity.
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Epigenetics Directs Long-Term Cellular Memory
- Epigenetics tells cells which parts of the DNA blueprint to use and keeps those choices stable over time.
- That stability lets cells adapt to long-term environments while remaining responsive to new signals.
Fat Cells Remodel To Expect Excess Energy
- Adipocytes remodel their gene activity when chronically exposed to excess nutrients so they process and store more fat.
- Those epigenetic changes make fat cells 'expect' abundant energy and act faster when food is available.
Long-Term Weight Shifts Persist More Than Short Fluctuations
- Long-term weight gain produces persistent cellular changes that are harder to reverse than short-term fluctuations.
- The body defends weight and upward shifts are easier than returning to a lower set point.


