Posted on 04/28/2013 6:15:14 PM PDT by neverdem
Can white fat cells be converted into brown fat cells to melt away excess pounds? Researchers now say theyve come a step closer to this dream: They decoded a toggle switch in mice which can significantly stimulate fat burning.
All fat is not alike. Love handles in particular contain troublesome white fat cells, which store excess food. Brown fat cells are the exact opposite: They burn excess energy as the desirable heaters of the body. Scientists at the University of Bonn working with Alexander Pfeifer, Ph.D., director of the Institute for Pharmacology and Toxicology, have spent years using animal models to explore how white fat can be converted into brown fat. In this way, excess pounds may be able to simply be melted away and obesity combated, says Prof. Pfeifer.
The researchers have now decoded a microRNA switch in mice that is important for brown fat cells. The researchers specifically studied microRNA 155. This gene regulator inhibits the transcription factor CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein β, which controls brown fat cell function.
Surprisingly, Prof. Pfeifer and his team found that this transcription factor also regulates the levels of microRNA 155, establishing a tight feed-back loop that works like a toggle switch: When the microRNA is highly expressed, brown fat cell differentiation is blocked; conversely, if the transcription factor wins the upper hand, brown fat is produced at an increased level, and this in turn boosts fat burning in the body.
The researchers at Bonn University and their colleagues from Germanys Federal Institute of Drugs and Medical Devices and from the University of Regensburg worked with so-called transgenic and knockout mice in which the gene for microRNA 155 was either increased or silenced. The mechanism was already set in motion when the microRNA 155 was only halved in the mice, reports lead author Yong Chen, graduate student of the NRW International Graduate School Biotech-Pharma. The mice then had significantly more brown fat cells available than did the control group, and had even converted white fat cells into brown fat cells.
The microRNA functions as an antagonist to the brown fat cells. As long as enough microRNA 155 is present, the production of brown fat cells is blocked, says Chen. Only if it falls below a certain proportion does this brake let up; the blueprint for brown fat can be read and implemented by the cellthe desired fat burners can develop. The team says these findings help scientists better understand the causes of lipid metabolism diseases.
The researchers see in their results a potential starting point for drugs to combat obesity. They have clues to the fact that the results, if anything, can be transferred from mice to humans. Thus, for example, researchers in Leipzig found increased levels of microRNA 155 in significantly overweight patients. This corresponds to findings from animal models: A lot of microRNA 155 is associated with reduced fat burning. However, we are still in the basic research stage, says Prof. Pfeifer. The path to suitable drugs is still a long one, he says.
The results appear in Nature Communications in a paper titled miR-155 regulates differentiation of brown and beige adipocytes via a bistable circuit.
Great, another study that puts us closer to healthy, good looking mice.
The biggest diet bugaboo is trying TOO hard, skipping meals in the interest of skipping calories. Alas Mr. Metabolism is all over the situation and slows down and it backfires. Better to eat three square but moderate meals and keep the pattern up for weeks or years if need be until the desired weight is reached.
Hallelujah, they cried, we've found the cure for obesity! Then they found that obese humans had very high levels of leptin - and that the problem wasn't that obese humans weren't producing it, but that they'd become resistant to its signaling.
And they were amazed. In just the same way that they were amazed when they learned how to measure insulin levels in humans, and discovered that type 2 diabetics. instead of having very low levels of insulin, like type 1 diabetics, as they'd always assumed, actually had very high levels of insulin, and were resistant to its effects.
I'd be not at all surprised if when they try this in humans they find out it doesn't work out the way they expect it to.
Eat less and exercise more.
Occam’s razor applies.
Well played, my friend...well played.
Right you are!
But if these researchers need any white fat, I’m willing to donate.
Eat less and exercise more.
Has a proven success rate of around 3%.
The trick is to eat actual food. Instead of the multitude of edible food-like substances that fill our grocery stores.
Eat when you are hungry, then go outside and work like hell until you are hungry again. Works for me. 5’11” tall, 175# and 63 years old.
Yup.
Never worried about dieting.
If you eat what is right for you, you’ll stop eating when you’ve had enough. If you eat crap, no matter how much you eat, you’ll be hungry in an hour.
Indeed. We can already cure mice of most kinds of cancer.
Good. I’ll get right on making the complementary small silencing RNA to turn off that microRNA-155. It shouldn’t be that hard, give me a week or so to make it, and another 15 years for the clinical trials...
Rats get all the best diets and fat burning drugs. All humans get are maybes and promises that never seem to happen.
BTTT
It’s getting very late and I know I’m getting tired, but that has to be one of the funniest things I have seen in a long time!
LOL!!
Mr. Metabolism can be tricked. Diet for two weeks or more and when weight loss(metabolism)slows down break the diet to speed up your metabolism for further dieting.
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