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

Weight loss surgery alters fatty liver disease genes

2013-08-06
(Press-News.org) Research has shown that weight loss surgery can benefit obese individuals in ways that go beyond shedding pounds, for example by causing early remission of type 2 diabetes. Now scientists have found that the surgery can also reverse the symptoms of fatty liver disease. The findings, which are to be published online on August 6 in the Cell Press journal Cell Metabolism, are derived from research on liver samples in normal and obese patients—some with fatty liver disease and some without fatty liver disease. The results provide another example of the DNA-altering effects of weight loss surgery.

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)—which includes a spectrum of liver disorders in people with obesity and type 2 diabetes—is the most common chronic liver disorder in industrialized countries. NAFLD has emerged as one of the dominant types of liver disease worldwide and effects one in three Americans.

In an experimental tour de force, researchers analyzed liver samples from 27 obese individuals with different stages of NAFLD, 18 healthy obese individuals without liver disease, and 18 normal-weight individuals without liver disease. Methylation—a chemical modification on DNA that regulates gene expression—was altered on various genes in patients with NAFLD. The expression levels of nine of these genes—which code for key enzymes involved in metabolism and insulin signaling—were also different from those seen in healthy individuals. Furthermore, binding sites for proteins that affect gene expression were enriched in the liver disease patients' genes.

Dr. Joseph Hampe and his colleagues also found that when they compared patients' liver biopsies before and after weight loss surgery, the NAFLD-associated methylation changes were partially reversible. The findings demonstrate that weight loss surgery changes the chemical properties of DNA, thereby affecting gene expression.

"These DNA modifications may point to the first steps in the evolution of the disease and may thus direct future research," says senior author Dr. Hampe of University Hospital Dresden, Germany. "In the very long term, they may lead to new therapeutic options."

###

Cell Metabolism, Ahrens et al.: "DNA methylation analysis in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease suggests distinct disease-specific and remodelling signatures after bariatric surgery."

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Women in large urban areas at higher risk of postpartum depression

2013-08-06
Women living in large urban centres in Canada with more than 500 000 inhabitants were at higher risk of postpartum depression than women in other areas, according to a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). Postpartum depression is a serious health concern for women and their children around the world. Major risk factors include lack of social support and a history of depression. In Canada, about 20% of people live in rural or remote regions, 35% live in the large urban areas of Montréal, Toronto and Vancouver, with the remaining 45% in semirural or semiurban ...

New trap and lure captures bed bugs more effectively

2013-08-06
A new pitfall trap designed to capture bed bugs is more effective than those currently on the market, according to the authors of an article appearing in the next issue of the Journal of Economic Entomology. The authors also found that traps baited with an experimental chemical lure mixture caught 2.2 times as many bed bugs as traps without the lure. Their findings suggest that an effective and affordable bed bug monitor can be made incorporating the new pitfall trap design, a chemical lure, and a sugar-and-yeast mixture to produce carbon dioxide, which is also known to ...

D-dimer plasma level: A reliable marker for venous thromboembolism after craniotomy

2013-08-06
Charlottesville, VA (August 6, 2013). The D-dimer test is often used to rule out the presence of venous thromboembolism; however, the test has been considered unreliable in postoperative patients because D-dimer levels may rise after surgery. Researchers from the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Halle in Germany hypothesized that this rise might be systematic and predictable, in which case a feasible postoperative threshold of D-dimer indicating venous thromboembolism could be determined. The results of this study show that the researchers were able to determine ...

Emotional behavior of adults could be triggered in the womb

2013-08-06
Adults could be at greater risk of becoming anxious and vulnerable to poor mental health if they were deprived of certain hormones while developing in the womb according to new research by scientists at Cardiff and Cambridge universities. New research in mice has revealed the role of the placenta in long-term programming of emotional behaviour and the first time scientists have linked changes in adult behaviour to alterations in placental function. Insulin-like growth factor-2 has been shown to play a major role in foetal and placental development in mammals, and changes ...

Switching between habitual and goal-directed actions -- a '2 in 1' system in our brain

2013-08-06
"Pressing the button of the lift at your work place, or apartment building is an automatic action – a habit. You don't even really look at the different buttons; your hand is almost reaching out and pressing on its own. But what happens when you use the lift in a new place? In this case, your hand doesn't know the way, you have to locate the buttons, find the right one, and only then your hand can press a button. Here, pushing the button is a goal-directed action." It is with this example that Rui Costa, principal investigator at the Champalimaud Neuroscience Programme ...

Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center implants 1 of first MRI-safe devices for pain

2013-08-06
VIDEO: Neurosurgeons at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center are among the first in the United States to successfully implant an MRI-safe spinal cord stimulator to help patients suffering from... Click here for more information. COLUMBUS, Ohio – Neurosurgeons at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center are among the first in the United States to successfully implant an MRI-safe spinal cord stimulator to help patients suffering from chronic back or limb ...

Marine life spawns sooner as oceans warm

2013-08-06
Warming oceans are impacting the breeding patterns and habitat of marine life, effectively re-arranging the broader marine landscape as species adjust to a changing climate, according to a three-year international study published today in Nature Climate Change. The international team led by CSIRO's Climate Adaptation Flagship and University of Queensland marine ecologists Elvira Poloczanska and Anthony Richardson, based their findings on a review of peer-reviewed literature from around the world, identifying more than 1700 changes, including 222 in Australia. CSIRO's ...

New design may produce heartier, more effective salmonella-based vaccines

2013-08-06
The bacterial pathogen Salmonella has a notorious capacity for infection. Last year alone, according to the Center for Disease Control, various species of Salmonella caused multistate disease outbreaks linked with contaminated peanut butter, mangoes, ground beef, cantaloupe, poultry, tuna fish, small turtles and dry dog food. The troublesome invader, however, can be turned to human advantage. Through genetic manipulation, the species S. Typhi can be rendered harmless and used in vaccines in order to prevent, rather than cause illness. In new research, reported in the ...

Unexpected synergy between two cancer-linked proteins offers hope for personalized cancer therapy

2013-08-06
A team of scientists led by Associate Professor Zeng Qi [1] from A*STAR's Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology (IMCB) have discovered a new biomarker which will help physicians predict how well cancer patients respond to cancer drugs. Having the means to identify patients who are most likely to benefit from currently available cancer drugs not only reduces substantially the healthcare cost for the patient, it could mean saving precious lives by getting the right drugs to the right patient at the onset of the treatment. This study published and featured on August cover ...

Soil carbon 'blowing in the wind'

2013-08-06
Australian soils are losing about 1.6 million tonnes of carbon per year from wind erosion and dust storms affecting agricultural productivity, our economy and carbon accounts, according to new research. Top soil is rich in nutrients and carbon but is increasingly being blown away by events such as the 'Red Dawn' in Sydney in 2009. When wind lifts carbon dust into the atmosphere it changes the amount and location of soil carbon. Some carbon falls back to the ground while some leaves Australia or ends up in the ocean. CSIRO research scientist Dr Adrian Chappell ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The human costs of climate overshoot

OFC 2026 plenary speakers address AI, advances in optical technologies and satellite communications

Machine learning to scan for signs of extraterrestrial life

Loss of key visual channel triggers rhythmic retinal signals linked to night blindness

New study suggests chiral skyrmion flows can be used for logic devices

AASM congratulates Sleep Medicine Disruptors Innovation Award winners

The future fate of water in the Andes

UC Irvine researchers link Antarctic ice loss to ‘storms’ at the ocean’s subsurface

Deep brain stimulation successful for one in two patients with treatment-resistant severe depression and anxiety

Single-celled organisms found to have a more complex DNA epigenetic code than multicellular life

A new gateway to global antimicrobial resistance data

Weather behind past heat waves could return far deadlier

Ultrasonic device dramatically speeds harvesting of water from the air

Artificial intelligence can improve psychiatric diagnosis

Watch cells trek along vesicle ‘breadcrumbs’

University of Liverpool unveils plans to establish UK’s flagship AI-driven materials discovery centre

ARC at Sheba Medical Center and Mount Sinai launch collaboration with NVIDIA to crack the hidden code of the human genome through AI

SRL welcomes first Deputy Editor-in-Chief

Time to act and not react: how can the European Union turn the tide of antimicrobial resistance?

Apriori Bio and A*STAR Infectious Diseases Labs Announce strategic partnership to advance next generation influenza vaccines

AI and extended reality help to preserve built cultural heritage

A new way to trigger responses in the body

Teeth of babies of stressed mothers come out earlier, suggests study

Slimming with seeds: Cumin curry spice fights fat

Leak-proof gasket with functionalized boron nitride nanoflakes enhances performance and durability

Gallup and West Health unveil new state rankings of Americans’ healthcare experiences

Predicting disease outbreaks using social media 

Linearizing tactile sensing: A soft 3D lattice sensor for accurate human-machine interactions

Nearly half of Australian adults experienced childhood trauma, increasing mental illness risk by 50 percent

HKUMed finds depression doubles mortality rates and increases suicide risk 10-fold; timely treatment can reduce risk by up to 30%

[Press-News.org] Weight loss surgery alters fatty liver disease genes