Soybean oil is woven deeply into the food system, appearing in everything from packaged snacks to restaurant fryers.
Yet its widespread use has raised questions among researchers.
According to a report from Journal of Lipid Research, earlier mouse studies showed inconsistent outcomes: some animals gained considerable weight on soybean-oil-heavy diets, while others remained relatively lean under identical feeding conditions.
That discrepancy prompted investigators to look more closely at the biological pathways involved.
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The team tracked mice over an extended feeding period. Their central question became whether differences inside the liver might alter how dietary fats are processed.
A liver protein with an outsized role
Through their analysis, the researchers identified notable variation in the activity of a liver-based regulator called HNF4α, which governs hundreds of genes linked to metabolism.
Mice engineered to produce an alternative form of this protein handled soybean oil differently and maintained stable body weight throughout the study.
Lead author Sonia Deol said to UC Riverside "This may be the first step toward understanding why some people gain weight more easily than others on a diet high in soybean oil".
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Key factor
The turning point came when researchers examined what happens after linoleic acid, the primary fat in soybean oil, breaks down in the body.
The UC Riverside team reported that the breakdown produces molecules known as oxylipins.
Normal mice accumulated these compounds at much higher levels than the genetically modified group.
Co-author Frances Sladek explained the pattern by noting that the body’s reaction to the fat, rather than the fat itself, appeared to drive the weight differences.
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The study also raises questions about whether similar mechanisms apply to other high-linoleic oils such as sunflower or corn oil.
Researchers say additional work will be needed before drawing broader nutritional conclusions.
Sources: ScienceDaily, Journal of Lipid Research og UC Riverside.
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