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Researchers Identify Pathways Leading To Activation Of Good Fat
Reported 23 Sep 2011
Researchers at the Joslin Diabetes Center have
identified for the first time two molecular pathways that
are critical to activating a type of "good" fat found in the body, a
discovery that could play an
important role in the fight against obesity and diabetes.
The fat, called brown fat, actually burns energy rather than storing it,
which the more common white fat
does.
The study, published in the October issue of Endocrinology, sought to learn
more about how to get brown
fat cells to grow. It identified two molecular pathways that lead to a
protein called necdin that blocks
brown fat growth.
With this information, researchers can look for ways to modify the steps
along the pathways, either to
stimulate another protein, called CREB, which shuts down necdin, or block a
different protein called
FoxO1, located along the second pathway, which stimulates necdin. The study
showed for the first time
that the two proteins can bind directly to the necdin gene.
"This is a very important piece of the puzzle," said Aaron Cypess, MD, PhD
an assistant investigator and
staff physician at Joslin and lead author of the paper. "It provides new
opportunities. The point is that
we have got to learn how to grow these brown fat cells. There's a lot of
missing information. We filled
in some of the important missing pieces."
Based on previous research, including a 2005 paper by Yu-Hua Tseng, Ph.D., a
Joslin investigator who also
is senior author of the paper, there was some evidence that the two pathways
were important to the
process of brown fat growth.
In thiss study, the researchers conducted tests in vitro on different cell
lines derived from brown fat
taken from mice. "We used different drugs to stimulate or block the
signaling pathways that we thought
were important," Dr. Cypess said. "The result was that we defined the two
pathways. We found what goes to
what to cause something to happen to the cells."
One pathway to necdin starts with insulin cells and runs through proteins
called Ras and ERK1/2 before
getting to CREB. The second also starts with insulin and runs through
proteins called P13-K and Akt
before getting to FoxO1.
"Both pathways get you there," Dr. Cypess said.
"With this more detailed description of the pathways leading to (brown fat
tissue), there can be more
focused attempts to develop interventions using brown fat as a treatment for
obesity and diabetes," the
paper concludes.
One intervention could be to grow brown fat in a laboratory and transplant
it into the bodies of people
who need it. Another could be the development of drugs to stimulate brown
fat growth.
This is the latest in a series of studies on brown fat led by Drs. Cypess
and Tseng. In July, Dr. Cypess
and his team showed that brown fat can be seen on imaging studies in nearly
half of all children and is
most active in those who are thin. The amount of the fat also increases in
children up until puberty,
when it begins to decline, according to that study, published in the Journal
of Pediatrics.
In 2009, Dr. Cypess and his team demonstrated in the New England Journal of
Medicine for the first time
that brown fat is metabolically active in adult humans. Previously, it had
been thought that brown fat
was present only in babies and children. The 2009 study showed it was found
to be active under normal
living conditions in 5.4 percent of all adults, with higher rates in women.
A 2008 Joslin study published in Nature by Dr. Tseng and colleagues
discovered that a protein called BMP7
could induce brown fat formation. Another more recent 2011 study from
Tseng's group identified precursor
cells in mice that can be triggered by BMP7 and other inducers to transform
into brown fat.
Concerning the small percentage of people in whom brown fat was detected in
the 2009 imaging study, Tseng
said it is possible that a much higher percentage of people have brown fat -
possibly everybody - but
that it simply was not able to be detected in the study because the scanners
were not sensitive enough or
because it might not have been activated in most people.
Either way, she said she considers the study of brown fat to be a "very
important" issue because it
offers a potential treatment for the obesity epidemic.
"Brown fat burns energy," she said. "It is a special tissue. These studies
have opened up a new avenue
for the treatment of obesity and its related disorders. This study will help
us deepen our understanding
of brown fat formation and could in the future combined with other
information that we have learned be
used to develop drugs or other interventions for obesity. But we still need
to know more."
The study was funded by the Eli Lilly Foundation and the National Institutes
of Health.
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