PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Newly-discovered human fat cell opens up new opportunities for future treatment of obesity

2013-05-02
(Press-News.org) The body's brown fat cells play a key role in the development of obesity and diabetes. Researchers at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have now discovered that we humans have two different kinds of brown fat cells and not one kind as previously thought. This discovery, now published in Nature Medicine, opens up new opportunities for future medicines that exploit the brown fat cells' ability to consume calories.

Unlike white fat cells, which store the body's surplus energy in the form of fat, brown fat cells have the unique property of being able to burn energy and turn it into heat.

The study now published by the researchers at the University of Gothenburg shows for the first time that people have at least two different kinds of brown fat cells - not just one as was previously thought. According to Sven Enerbäck, who heads the country's leading research group in the study of fat cells and metabolism, this is an interesting discovery.

"We already know that those of us who have more brown fat tissue have a smaller risk of developing type 2 diabetes. With these new results, we should eventually be able to develop methods for stimulating the brown fat tissue, so that some of the surplus energy we store in the form of fat tissue can be converted into heat. Such a treatment could both prevent obesity and reduce the risk of developing obesity-related diseases such as type 2 diabetes," says Sven Enerbäck.

The researchers call the new type of brown fat tissue that they have discovered "classical brown fat". According to the Gothenburg study, young people have this classic brown fat tissue, but it seems to disappear during adolescence.

"One idea is to be able to "reactivate" the classical brown fat tissue in older people and so treat obesity," says Sven Enerbäck.

The research into brown fat tissue is being done in close cooperation with researchers at Linköping University. The article "Evidence for two types of brown adipose tissue in humans" is published online in Nature Medicine on April 21.



INFORMATION:



Link to article: http://www.nature.com/nm/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nm.3017.html

Contact:

Sven Enerbäck, Professor
Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg
Telephone: + 46 (0)31-786 3334



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Exercise proves to be ineffective against care home depression

2013-05-02
Researchers at the University of Warwick and Queen Mary, University of London have shown that exercise is not effective in reducing burden of depression among elderly care home residents. Exercise is a low risk intervention that can improve mental health but the findings of a National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment Programme study, published in The Lancet, conclude that there is a requirement for alternative approaches to reduce the burden of depression in frail, very elderly, care home residents. The large randomised controlled trial sought ...

Stem cell discovery could aid research into new treatments

2013-05-02
Scientists have made a fundamental discovery about how the properties of embryonic stem cells are controlled. The study, which focuses on the process by which these cells renew and increase in number, could help research to find new treatments. Researchers have found that a protein, which switches on genes to allow embryonic stem cells to self-renew, works better when the natural occurring level of the protein is reduced. It was previously thought that once levels of this protein – called Oct 4 – were reduced the numbers of new stem cells being produced would also ...

More effective, cheaper concrete manufactured with ash from olive residue biomass

2013-05-02
University of Granada researchers have successfully manufactured self-compacting concrete using ash from the combustion of olive pruning residue pellets. Due to its plasticity and cohesion, this type of concrete needs no compaction when used in construction and has many advantages over conventional concrete, resulting in considerable savings of time and money. In an article published in "Construction and Building Materials", the researchers present preliminary results on the use of fly ash, produced in domestic boiler combustion of biomass olive residue pellets, as a ...

Is the humble fig more than just a fruit?

2013-05-02
Figs and fig trees are familiar to a wide cross-section of human society, both as a common food and for their spiritual importance. What is less well understood is the global nature of this association between figs and humans, which is maintained across species, continents and societies. This relationship is explored by David Wilson of Ecology and Heritage Partners and Anna Wilson from the University of Melbourne in Australia in a paper published in the Springer journal Human Ecology. Using examples from around the world, the authors show that figs are a vital resource ...

On-site asbestos detector offers promise of better workplace safety

2013-05-02
WASHINGTON, May 2, 2013—Asbestos was once called a miracle material because of its toughness and fire-resistant properties. It was used as insulation, incorporated into cement and even woven into firemen's protective clothing. Over time, however, scientists pinned the cause of lung cancers such as mesothelioma on asbestos fiber inhalation. Asbestos was banned in the many industrialized countries in the 1980s, but the threat lingers on in the ceilings, walls and floors of old buildings and homes. Now a team of researchers from the University of Hertfordshire in the U.K. ...

Unethical advertising at launch of antidepressants

2013-05-02
The new feature of the antidepressant drugs of the 1990s was that they had milder side-effects than their predecessors. Combined with aggressive marketing, this meant that annual sales in Sweden increased from just under EUR 18 million to over EUR 100 million in the space of just a few years. Most countries have an established system for self-regulation of pharmaceuticals advertising. Sweden has been held up internationally as a good example. The Swedish pharmaceutical industry's trade organisation appoints an information examiner to monitor the marketing to ensure it ...

Study uncovers mechanism for how grapes reduce heart failure associated with hypertension

2013-05-02
A study appearing in the Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry¹ demonstrates that grapes are able to reduce heart failure associated with chronic high blood pressure (hypertension) by increasing the activity of several genes responsible for antioxidant defense in the heart tissue. Grapes are a known natural source of antioxidants and other polyphenols, which researchers believe to be responsible for the beneficial effects observed with grape consumption. This study, funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and conducted at the University of Michigan ...

3D simulation shows how form of complex organs evolves by natural selection

2013-05-02
Researchers at the Institute of Biotechnology at the Helsinki University and the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) have developed the first three-dimensional simulation of the evolution of morphology by integrating the mechanisms of genetic regulation that take place during embryo development. The study, published in Nature, highlights the real complexity of the genetic interactions that lead to adult organisms' phenotypes (physical forms), helps to explain how natural selection influences body form and leads towards much more realistic virtual experiments on evolution. "Right ...

Summit fire in Southern California

2013-05-02
According to the CBS affiliate in Los Angeles, "A fast-moving, wind-driven brush fire in Riverside County was 40 percent contained as of early Thursday morning, CAL Fire officials said. The Summit Fire broke out around 12:30 p.m. Wednesday near North San Gorgonio Road and Summit Drive in Banning. Crews fought the nearly 3,000-acre fire overnight and were aided by diminished winds that allowed them to lay containment lines around the blaze." Over 400 firefighters have been involved in trying to quell the blaze since it began yesterday and several communities have been ...

Focus on STD, not cancer prevention, to promote HPV vaccine use

2013-05-02
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The HPV vaccine can prevent both cervical cancer and a nasty sexually transmitted disease in women. But emphasizing the STD prevention will persuade more young women to get the vaccine, a new study suggests. These results go against the conventional wisdom that scaring women about the possibility of cancer is the best way to get them vaccinated. The failure of that cancer-threat message may be one reason that fewer than 20 percent of adolescent girls in the United States have received the HPV vaccine, said Janice Krieger, lead author of the study and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Smarter robot planning for the real world

Optimization of biosafety laboratory management via an AI-driven intelligent system

Mouse neurons that identify friends in need and friends indeed

Why the foam on Belgian beers lasts so long

On tap: What makes beer foams so stable?

Overweight older adults face lower risk of death after major surgery

Body composition, fitness, and mental health in preadolescent children

Medical school admissions after the Supreme Court’s 2023 Affirmative Action ruling

Scientists map dendritic cell reactions to vaccines

"Fatigue" strengthen steels

Bacterial memory could be the missing key to beating life threatening pathogens

Global analysis reveals overlooked hotspots at risk for long COVID due to early disability burdens

Metabolomic characteristics and clinical implications in pathological subtypes of lung cancer

Faster biological aging linked to cognitive decline in older adults

American College of Cardiology issues vaccine guidance for adults with heart disease

World Heart Federation honors American Heart Association CEO for lifetime of impact

SwRI scientist leads science team contributions to a new NASA heliophysics AI foundation model

Could routine eye exams reveal early signs of Alzheimer’s?

Parental liver disease death more than doubles risk of alcohol-associated hepatitis in next generation

Shared gene signatures and key mechanisms in the progression from liver cirrhosis to acute-on-chronic liver failure

Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator extended to 2028

Feeling good about yourself

People with schizophrenia have higher risk of COPD

Sibling-specific aggression in women and girls

Study raises red flags about BPA replacements

The irresistibility of extrapolating from past performance

Predicting nationality from beliefs and values

Mindset shift about catastrophes linked to decreased depression, inflammation

Astronomers make unexpected discovery of planet in formation around a young star

EBMT partners in a new consortium to decentralise CAR-T cell therapy and improve hospital workflow

[Press-News.org] Newly-discovered human fat cell opens up new opportunities for future treatment of obesity