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

A fattening gene

Max Planck researchers discover a gene that controls fat metabolism

A fattening gene
2014-04-30
(Press-News.org) This news release is available in German.

The long-term consumption of too much high-energy and high-fat food leads to overweight. Behind this trivial statement lies the extremely complex regulation of lipid metabolism. Together with colleagues from Japan, scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research in Bad Nauheim have now discovered that the Sirt7 gene plays a central role in energy metabolism. Despite consuming high-fat food, genetically modified mice that lack the gene maintain their normal weight.

Food was not always available to such excess as it is in western societies today. On the contrary, our metabolism was tailored to the optimum exploitation of energy, as humans, for millennia, had to budget their calories carefully. Thus, the formation and depletion of fat depots as energy stores is subject to complex regulation. A series of regulators is involved in lipid metabolism in the liver for the purpose of storing excess energy and making it available again when required.

Working in cooperation with colleagues from the Sendai and Kumamoto Universities in Japan, scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research in Bad Nauheim have now identified a protein from the sirtuin group that plays a major role in the utilisation of energy in the context of a high-fat diet and is responsible for the formation of fat depots. Sirtuins are known as a group of proteins with wide-ranging biological functions.

The researchers carried out their tests on mice which lack a sirtuin known as SIRT7. These Sirt7-knockout mice and non-genetically-modified animals were fed particularly high-fat pellets for months. "We established that Sirt7-knockout mice put on significantly less weight than the control group. On the contrary, they maintained their normal weight," says Eva Bober, a scientist at the MPI. Moreover, compared with the non-genetically-modified mice, these animals tended to have lower triglyceride and cholesterol levels in their livers and normal insulin levels. "Everything pointed to the fact that the animals which lacked SIRT7 were able to process the excess energy in the food better and did not build up any pathological fat depots," says Bober.

To investigate the molecular processes behind this observation, the scientists studied the gene activities of the liver cells. In the process, it emerged that SIRT7 activates the expression of a large number of genes for lipid metabolism. In the liver cells from mice without SIRT7, this gene remains largely unactivated and fewer fat depots are formed as a result.

"We discovered a second mechanism as well," says Bober. "SIRT7 also inhibits the degradation of certain proteins. Because they are then active for longer, these proteins also make a greater contribution to energy storage than is actually intended." Conversely, if SIRT7 is missing, these proteins are degraded and fewer fat depots are formed.

The researchers hope that their study will provide the basis for new therapeutic approaches. "We would now like to examine substances with which the function of SIRT7 can be deliberately inhibited. We want to examine whether the same effects arise as observed in the mice that lack the Sirt7 gene," explains Bober. The long-term objective is the development of a drug that would reduce the efficiency of lipid metabolism. This would enable the avoidance of overweight.

INFORMATION: Original paper: Tatsuya Yoshizawa, Md. Fazlul Karim, Yoshifumi Sato, Takafumi Senokuchi, Keishi Miyata, Takaichi Fukuda, Chisa Go, Masayoshi Tasaki, Kohei Uchimura,Tsuyoshi Kadomatsu, Zhe Tian, Christian Smolka, Tomohiro Sawa, Motohiro Takeya, Kazuhito Tomizawa, Yukio Ando, Eiichi Araki, Takaaki Akaike, Thomas Braun, Yuichi Oike, Eva Bober, Kazuya Yamagata

SIRT7 Controls Hepatic Lipid Metabolism by Regulating the Ubiquitin-Proteasome Pathway.
Cell Metabolism, April 2014

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
A fattening gene

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

In recognizing speech sounds, the brain does not work the way a computer does

In recognizing speech sounds, the brain does not work the way a computer does
2014-04-30
VIDEO: Patterns of activation induced by listening to human speech move across brain hemispheres over a period of 300 milliseconds in these images, produced by combining data from EEG, MEG and... Click here for more information. How does the brain decide whether or not something is correct? When it comes to the processing of spoken language – particularly whether or not certain sound combinations are allowed in a language – the common theory has been that the brain applies a ...

Social media users need help to adjust to interface changes

2014-04-30
Social media companies that give users a greater sense of control can ease them into interface changes, as well as curb defections to competitors, according to researchers. "Several studies have looked into how social media companies have failed," said Pamela Wisniewski, a post-doctoral scholar in information sciences and technology, Penn State. "What we need to think about is how social media companies can be more adaptive and how they can improve the longevity of their sites. In a study of the reaction to the introduction of Facebook's Timeline interface between 2011 ...

Parents just as likely to use cell phones while driving, putting child passengers at risk

2014-04-30
Ann Arbor, Mich. — Despite their precious cargo, parents are no less likely to engage in driving distractions like cell phone use than drivers from the general population, according to a new University of Michigan study published in Academic Pediatrics. The study found that 90 percent of parent drivers said they engaged in at least one of the 10 distractions examined in the study while their child was a passenger and the vehicle was moving, says lead author Michelle L. Macy, M.D., M.S., an emergency medicine physician at the University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Children's ...

Study questions Neandertal inferiority to early modern humans

2014-04-30
The embargo has been lifted for the article, 'Neandertal Demise: An Archaeological Analysis of the Modern Human Superiority Complex.' An analysis of the archaeological records of Neandertals and their modern human contemporaries has found that complex interbreeding and assimilation may have been responsible for Neandertal disappearance 40,000 years ago, in contrast to many current theories, according to results published April 30, 2014, in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Paola Villa from the University of Colorado Museum and Wil Roebroeks from Leiden University ...

Lymph node ultrasounds more accurate in obese breast cancer patients

2014-04-30
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic research into whether ultrasounds to detect breast cancer in underarm lymph nodes are less effective in obese women has produced a surprising finding. Fat didn't obscure the images — and ultrasounds showing no suspicious lymph nodes actually proved more accurate in overweight and obese patients than in women with a normal body mass index, the study found. The research is among several Mayo studies presented at the American Society of Breast Surgeons annual meeting April 30-May 4 in Las Vegas. Researchers studied 1,331 breast cancer patients ...

Surgeons and health care settings influence type of breast cancer surgery women undergo

Surgeons and health care settings influence type of breast cancer surgery women undergo
2014-04-30
TORONTO, April 30, 2014 – Breast cancer is one of the few major illnesses for which physicians may not recommend a specific treatment option. North American women are more likely to opt for precautionary breast surgery when physicians don't specifically counsel against it, according to a new study. The research, presented today at the American Society of Breast Surgeons Annual Meeting in Las Vegas, also demonstrates how clarity during consultations and the capability of clinical facilities also play important roles influencing a woman's breast cancer treatment choices. There ...

Study: Women leaders perceived as effective as male counterparts

2014-04-30
WASHINGTON -- When it comes to being perceived as effective leaders, women are rated as highly as men, and sometimes higher - a finding that speaks to society's changing gender roles and the need for a different management style in today's globalized workplace, according to a meta-analysis published by the American Psychological Association. "When all leadership contexts are considered, men and women do not differ in perceived leadership effectiveness," said lead researcher Samantha C. Paustian-Underdahl, PhD, of Florida International University. "As more women have ...

Flexible pressure-sensor film shows how much force a surface 'feels' -- in color

2014-04-30
A newly developed pressure sensor could help car manufacturers design safer automobiles and even help Little League players hold their bats with a better grip, scientists report. The study describing their high-resolution sensor, which can be painted onto surfaces or built into gloves, appears in the ACS journal Nano Letters. Yadong Yin and colleagues explain that pressure is a part of our daily lives. We and the objects around us constantly exert pressure on surfaces, from a simple, light touch of a finger on a smartphone screen to the impact of a head-on car collision. ...

Sustainable barnacle-repelling paint could help the shipping industry and the environment

2014-04-30
Barnacles might seem like a given part of a seasoned ship's hull, but they're literally quite a drag and cause a ship to burn more fuel. To prevent these and other hangers-on from slowing ships down, scientists are developing a sustainable paint ingredient from plants that can repel clingy sea critters without killing them. The report appears in the ACS journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. Guillermo Blustein and colleagues explain that barnacles and other ocean creatures that stick to hulls create a cascade of problems. By increasing water resistance, ...

Capturing carbon to produce more oil: Climate solution or folly?

2014-04-30
Any method that leads to the production of more oil seems counter to the prevailing wisdom on climate change that says use of more greenhouse-gas-emitting fuel is detrimental. But there's one oil-recovery process that some say could be part of the climate change solution and now unites unlikely allies in industry, government and environmental groups, according to an article in Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly news magazine of the American Chemical Society. Jeff Johnson, a senior correspondent at C&EN, explains that a process called enhanced oil recovery ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Textbooks need to be rewritten: RNA, not DNA, is the main cause of acute sunburn

Brits still associate working-class accents with criminal behavior – study warns of bias in the criminal justice system

What do you think ‘guilty’ sounds like? Scientists find accent stereotypes influence beliefs about who commits crimes

University of Calgary nursing study envisions child trauma treatment through a Marvel and DC lens

Research on performance optimization of virtual data space across WAN

Researchers reveal novel mechanism for intrinsic regulation of sugar cravings

Immunological face of megakaryocytes

Calorie labelling leads to modest reductions in selection and consumption

The effectiveness of intradialytic parenteral nutrition with ENEFLUID???? infusion

New study reveals AI’s transformative impact on ICU care with smarter predictions and transparent insights

Snakes in potted olive trees ‘tip of the iceberg’ of ornamental plant trade hazards

Climate change driving ‘cost-of-living' squeeze in lizards

Stem Cell Reports seeks applications for its Early Career Scientist Editorial Board

‘Brand new physics’ for next generation spintronics

Pacific Islander teens assert identity through language

White House honors Tufts economist

Sharp drop in mortality after 41 weeks of pregnancy

Flexible electronics integrated with paper-thin structure for use in space

Immune complex shaves stem cells to protect against cancer

In the Northeast, 50% of adult ticks carry Lyme disease carrying bacteria

U of A Cancer Center clinical trial advances research in treatment of biliary tract cancers

Highlighting the dangers of restricting discussions of structural racism

NYU Tandon School of Engineering receives nearly $10 million from National Telecommunications and Information Administration

NASA scientists find new human-caused shifts in global water cycle

This tiny galaxy is answering some big questions

Large and small galaxies may grow in ways more similar than expected

The ins and outs of quinone carbon capture

Laboratory for Laser Energetics at the University of Rochester launches IFE-STAR ecosystem and workforce development initiatives

Most advanced artificial touch for brain-controlled bionic hand

Compounding drought and climate effects disrupt soil water dynamics in grasslands

[Press-News.org] A fattening gene
Max Planck researchers discover a gene that controls fat metabolism