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

Evidence that shivering and exercise may convert white fat to brown

2014-02-04
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Alison Heather
a.heather@garvan.org.au
61-292-958-128
Garvan Institute of Medical Research
Evidence that shivering and exercise may convert white fat to brown

A new study suggests that shivering and bouts of moderate exercise are equally capable of stimulating the conversion of energy-storing 'white fat' into energy-burning 'brown fat'.

Around 50 g of white fat stores more than 300 kilocalories of energy. The same amount of brown fat could burn up to 300 kilocalories a day.

Endocrinologist Dr Paul Lee, from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research, recently undertook the study at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Washington*, funded as an NHMRC Early Career Research Fellow.

His work uncovered a way that fat and muscle communicate with each other through specific hormones – turning white fat cells into brown fat cells to protect us against cold.

Dr Lee showed that during cold exposure and exercise, levels of the hormone irisin (produced by muscle) and FGF21 (produced by brown fat) rose. Specifically, around 10-15 minutes of shivering resulted in equivalent rises in irisin as an hour of moderate exercise. In the laboratory, irisin and FGF21 turn human white fat cells into brown fat cells over a period of six days. The study is now published in Cell Metabolism.

We are all born with supplies of brown fat around our necks, nature's way of helping to keep us warm as infants. Until only a few years ago, it was thought to vanish in early infancy, but we now know that brown fat is present in most, if not all, adults. Adults with more brown fat are slimmer than those without.

"Excitement in the brown fat field has risen significantly over last few years because its energy-burning nature makes it a potential therapeutic target against obesity and diabetes," said Dr Lee.

"White fat transformation into brown fat could protect animals against diabetes, obesity and fatty liver. Glucose levels are lower in humans with more brown fat."

In the current study, Lee set out to understand the mechanism underlying the activation of brown fat. It was already known that cold temperatures stimulate brown fat, but was unclear how the body signals that message to its cells.

The body can sense and relay environmental changes to different organs via nerves and hormones. Being an endocrinologist, Lee investigated the hormones that are stimulated by cold environments.

"When we are cold, we first activate our brown fat because it burns energy and releases heat to protect us. When that energy is insufficient, muscle contracts mechanically, or shivers, thereby generating heat. However we did not know how muscle and fat communicate in this process."

"So we exposed volunteers to increasing cold, from 18 to 12 degrees, until they shivered. We drew blood samples to measure hormone levels and detected shivering by special devices placed on the skin that sense muscle electrical activity."

"Volunteers started to shiver by around 16 or 14 degrees, varying between individuals."

"We identified two hormones that are stimulated by cold – irisin and FGF21 – released from shivering muscle and brown fat respectively. These hormones fired up the energy-burning rate of human white fat cells in the laboratory, and the treated fat cells began to emit heat – a hallmark of brown fat function."

A team from Harvard University discovered irisin through NIH-funded research in 2012, identifying it as a muscle hormone stimulated by exercise that turned white fat in animals into brown fat.

The puzzling aspect of the finding was that exercise itself produces heat, so why would exercising muscle initiate a process that would generate yet more heat?

Lee invited cold-exposure study participants to take part in exercise tests to compare the two processes. "We found that exercising for an hour on a bicycle at a moderate level produced the same amount of irisin as shivering for 10-15 minutes," he said.

"We speculate exercise could be mimicking shivering – because there is muscle contraction during both processes, and that exercise-stimulated irisin could have evolved from shivering in the cold."

"From a clinical point of view, irisin and FGF21 represent a cold-stimulated hormone system, which was previously unknown, and may be harnessed in future obesity therapeutics through brown fat activation."



INFORMATION:



*The study was conducted at and supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the NIH. The content of this news release is the sole responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of NIH.

Dr Lee's role in the study was also supported by the Royal Australasian College of Physicians Foundation and the School of Medicine at The University of Queensland.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pain sensitivity may be influenced by lifestyle and environment, twin study suggests

2014-02-04
Researchers at King's College London have discovered that sensitivity to pain could be altered by a person's lifestyle and environment throughout their lifetime. The study is ...

Existing medicines show promise for treating stomach and bowel cancer

2014-02-04
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 4-Feb-2014 [ | E-mail ] var addthis_pub="eurekalert"; var addthis_options = "favorites, delicious, digg, facebook, twitter, google, newsvine, reddit, slashdot, stumbleupon, buzz, more" Share Contact: Vanessa Solomon solomon@wehi.edu.au 61-393-452-971 Walter and Eliza Hall Institute Rachel Steinhardt rsteinhardt@licr.org 212-450-1582 Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Existing medicines show promise for treating stomach and bowel cancer Stomach and bowel cancer, two of the most common cancers worldwide, could be treated ...

Tricks of the trade: Study suggests how freelancers can land more jobs

2014-02-04
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY'S HAAS SCHOOL OF BUSINESS – According to Elance.com, the online workplace lists more than three million registered freelancers ...

Stopping liver failure from painkiller overdose

2014-02-04
University of Adelaide researchers have identified a key step for the future prevention of liver failure resulting from taking too much of the everyday painkiller paracetamol (also known as acetaminophen). Published ...

A healthy balance

2014-02-04
STAT1 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 1) is a member of a family of transcription factors, cellular proteins that control whether and when ...

Happy people, safer sex

2014-02-04
Having a good week? It may lead to healthier choices. If you are a man with HIV, you may be more likely ...

When it comes to memory, quality matters more than quantity

2014-02-04
The capacity of our working memory is better explained by the quality of memories we can store than by their number, a team of psychology researchers has concluded. Their analysis, which appears in the latest ...

Despite burden, Sjögren's syndrome may not impede function

2014-02-04
BOSTON (February 4, 2014) —People living with Sjögren's syndrome, ...

Speech disrupts facial attention in 6-month-olds who later develop autism

2014-02-04
Philadelphia, PA, February 4, 2014 – From birth, infants naturally show a preference for human contact and interaction, including faces and voices. These ...

Patterns of particles generated by surface charges

2014-02-04
This news release is available ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells

Apes share human ability to imagine

Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance

Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments

Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down

Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks

Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030

How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response

Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust

Boston College scientists help explain why methane spiked in the early 2020s

Penn Nursing study identifies key predictors for chronic opioid use following surgery

KTU researcher’s study: Why Nobel Prize-level materials have yet to reach industry

Research spotlight: Interplay of hormonal contraceptive use, stress and cardiovascular risk in women

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Catherine Prater awarded postdoctoral fellowship from the American Heart Association

AI agents debate more effectively when given personalities and the ability to interrupt

Tenecteplase for acute non–large vessel occlusion 4.5 to 24 hours after ischemic stroke

Immune 'hijacking' predicts cancer evolution

VIP-2 experiment narrows the search for exotic physics beyond the Pauli exclusion principle

A global challenge posed by the presence of pharmaceuticals in the environment

Dream engineering can help solve ‘puzzling’ questions

Sport: ‘Football fever’ peaks on match day

Scientists describe a window into evolution before the tree of life

Survival of patients diagnosed with cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic

Growth trajectories in infants from families with plant-based or omnivorous dietary patterns

Korea University College of Medicine hosts lecture by Austrian neuropathology expert, Professor Adelheid Wöhrer

5-FU chemotherapy linked to rare brain toxicity in cancer patient

JMIR Publications introduces the new Karma program: A merit-based reward system dedicated to peer review excellence

H5N1 causes die-off of Antarctic skuas, a seabird

Study suggests protein made in the liver is a key factor in men’s bone health

Last chance to get a hotel discount for the world’s largest physics meeting

[Press-News.org] Evidence that shivering and exercise may convert white fat to brown