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

Masonic Medical Research Institute publishes breakthrough study on combating heart disease linked to obesity and high-fat diet

The study highlights the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B, a nodal enzyme involved in insulin signaling, as a key driver in maladaptive cardiac metabolism and dysfunction under dietary stres

2025-07-22
(Press-News.org) Utica, NY - A groundbreaking new study led by researchers at the Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) has identified a promising molecular target to protect the heart against damage caused by high-fat diet and obesity. The study, published this week in the leading journal Science Signaling, highlights the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B, a nodal enzyme involved in insulin signaling, as a key driver in maladaptive cardiac metabolism and dysfunction under dietary stress.

In obesity and high-fat diet conditions, the heart undergoes a metabolic switch, moving from its healthy preference for fatty acid oxidation to an overreliance on glucose. This shift contributes to cardiac steatosis, mitochondrial dysfunction, and ultimately a cardiac disease condition called cardiomyopathy, a thickening and stiffening of the heart. The research team discovered that mice lacking PTP1B specifically in cardiomyocytes (heart muscle cells) were resistant to these harmful changes.

“These findings reveal a novel major mechanism by which high-fat diet compromises cardiac function and show how targeting PTP1B in the heart can help prevent those effects,” said Dr. Maria I. Kontaridis, executive director, Gordon K. Moe professor and chair of biomedical research and translational medicine at MMRI and senior author of the study. “By preserving fatty acid oxidation and preventing excessive lipid accumulation, we can protect against heart disease progression in at-risk populations.”

The study utilized a mouse model with cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of PTP1B. When subjected to a high-fat diet, these mice maintained healthy heart structure and function, showed reduced lipid buildup, and preserved mitochondrial integrity. Advanced metabolic and phosphoproteomic analyses revealed that PTP1B deletion sustained fatty acid metabolism while suppressing lipogenesis and pathological glucose utilization, via signaling pathways involving AMPK and PKM2.

“PTP1B acts like a metabolic switch that pushes the heart toward glucose dependence during stress, which may worsen cardiac outcomes,” added Dr. Yan Sun, postdoctoral fellow in the Kontaridis lab and leading author of the manuscript. “Disabling this switch allows the heart to remain metabolically flexible and resilient.”

With an alarming 50 percent of Americans on track to be classified as obese by the year 2030 (World Health Organization), including a disproportionate number of children, the urgency of this epidemic cannot be overstated. These findings have the potential to impact society significantly. These results position PTP1B as a potential therapeutic target for preventing heart disease in obese patients and those with diet-induced metabolic disorders. The team hopes this foundational research will pave the way for future clinical studies.

MMRI scientists who contributed to the study include Drs. Maria I. Kontaridis, Yan Sun, Abhishek Kumar Mishra, Chase W. Kessinger, Bing Xu, Mr. Peiyang Tang and Ms. Katherine Nelson. This work was in collaboration with Mr. Vasanth Chanrasekhar, , Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School; Dr. Jonathan Kirk and Ms. Michaela Door, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine; Dr. Yunan Gao, The Fourth Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University; Dr. Mirela Delibegovic and Ms. Sarah Kamli-Salino, University of Aberdeen; and Dr. Dale Abel, Fraternal Order of Eagles Diabetes Research Center and Department of Medicine and David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. This collaborative effort underscores the depth of expertise and the collective commitment to advancing medical research.

About the MMRI
The MMRI is a leading biomedical research organization focused on advancing our understanding of human disease through basic and translational science. MMRI aims to develop innovative therapies for cardiovascular, neurocognitive, autoimmune, and rare diseases.

 

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How our body keeps time in the heat

2025-07-22
Researchers led by Gen Kurosawa at the RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS) in Japan have used theoretical physics to discover how our biological clock maintains a consistent 24-hour cycle—even as temperatures change. They found that this stability is achieved through a subtle shift in the “shape” of gene activity rhythms at higher temperatures, a process known as waveform distortion. This process not only helps keep time steady but also influences how well our internal clock synchronizes with the day-night cycle. The study was published in PLOS Computational Biology on July 22.   Have ...

Not just a messenger: Developing nano-sized delivery agents that also provide therapeutic treatment

2025-07-22
A group of University of Ottawa researchers have already shown how scientists can harness gene therapies to deliver nano-sized treatments for cancer, cardiovascular and other diseases. Unfortunately, the delivery agents in the process do not possess any therapeutic potential and ultimately degrade after acting as the messenger. So, the researchers asked: can we not develop nanoparticle platforms to be more than just mules?  “Since millions of particles are injected to deliver ...

AI used for real-time selection of actionable messages for government and public health campaigns

2025-07-22
Public health promotion campaigns can be effective, but they do not tend to be efficient. Most are time-consuming, expensive, and reliant on the intuition of creative workers who design messages without a clear sense of what will spark behavioral change. A new study conducted by Dolores Albarracín and Man-pui Sally Chan of the University of Pennsylvania, government and community agencies, and researchers at the University of Illinois and Emory University suggests that artificial intelligence (AI) can facilitate theory- and evidence-based message selection. The research group, led by Albarracín, a social psychologist who is the Amy Gutmann ...

Sorting without comparators: The rise of intelligent memory systems

2025-07-22
Peking University, July 16, 2025: A research team led by Prof. Yang Yuchao from the School of Electronic and Computer Engineering at Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School has achieved a global breakthrough by developing the first sort-in-memory hardware system tailored for complex, nonlinear sorting tasks. Published in Nature Electronics, the study titled “A fast and reconfigurable sort-in-memory system based on memristors” proposes a comparator-free architecture, overcoming one of the ...

Access to green spaces may be linked to lower risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children

2025-07-22
Living near green spaces before and during pregnancy as well as in early childhood is associated with a reduced risk of neurodevelopmental disorders, according to Rutgers Health researchers. Published in Environment International, the study examined how exposure to green spaces during critical periods of early childhood development influences the risk of neurodevelopmental conditions, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and other developmental delays. The researchers said the impact of exposure to these ...

Teens are using dating apps more than you’d think. It may not be a bad thing.

2025-07-22
First to track teen dating app use through real-time smartphone data versus self-reports Over six months, 23.5% of teens used dating apps, higher than previous estimates Apps may provide valuable social connections, particularly for sexual and gender minorities CHICAGO --- Nearly one in four teenagers are using dating apps — and it may not be hurting their mental health, suggests a new Northwestern Medicine study that monitored adolescents over six months. The findings challenge the popular belief that dating apps are harmful for teenagers. Instead, the study suggests, these apps may ...

AI chatbots remain overconfident -- even when they’re wrong

2025-07-22
Artificial intelligence chatbots are everywhere these days, from smartphone apps and customer service portals to online search engines. But what happens when these handy tools overestimate their own abilities?  Researchers asked both human participants and four large language models (LLMs) how confident they felt in their ability to answer trivia questions, predict the outcomes of NFL games or Academy Award ceremonies, or play a Pictionary-like image identification game. Both the people and the LLMs tended to be overconfident about how they would hypothetically perform. ...

From hydrogen bonds to high performance: The future of aqueous batteries

2025-07-22
Peking University, July 07, 2025: A research team led by Prof. Pan Feng from the School of Advanced Materials, Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School has uncovered key mechanisms that govern how protons are stored and transported in aqueous batteries. The study provides critical insights that could lead to safer, faster-charging, and higher-capacity alternatives to today’s lithium-ion batteries. Published in Matter, a Cell Press journal, the study titled “Proton storage and transfer in aqueous batteries” reveals how hydrogen-bond network engineering enables efficient proton storage and transport. Background Aqueous batteries, ...

Ancient brachiopods used tiny bristles to maintain “social distancing,” study reveals

2025-07-22
Understanding how ancient species arranged themselves in space is a key puzzle in paleoecology, but direct evidence of how prehistoric organisms used their body structures to regulate spacing has long eluded scientists. Now, researchers in China have uncovered the first direct evidence: Approximately 436-million-year-old brachiopods from the early Silurian period used tiny, bristle-like structures called setae to maintain orderly, "checkerboard" spacing—ensuring they had enough room to thrive on the ancient seafloor. The findings, published in Proceedings ...

320 million trees are killed by lightning each year — Considerable biomass loss

2025-07-22
Considerable biomass loss 320 million trees are killed by lightning each year Lightning has a greater impact on forests than previously thought. Researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have developed new model calculations that, for the first time, estimate the global influence of lightning on forest ecosystems. According to their findings, an estimated 320 million trees die each year due to lightning strikes. Tree losses caused by direct lightning-ignited wildfires are not included ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Women politicians judged more harshly than men, research finds

Surprising rocky worlds revealed around a small star

UC Davis Health receives $3.6 million grant from NIH to improve eye gene therapy

Heatwaves to increase in frequency, duration under global warming

GLP-1 diabetes drugs likely trump metformin for curbing dementia risk in type 2 diabetes

Annual UK cost of mental health disorder PTSD likely tops £40 billion

Study: Powerlifting through breast cancer – how a breast cancer survivor defied chemotherapy with strength trainin

Sustainability Accelerator selects 41 new projects with potential for rapid scale-up

First impressions count: How babies are talked about during ultrasounds impacts parent perceptions, caregiving relationship

Next-gen tech can detect disease biomarker in period blood

UTA unveils supercomputing research hub

Americans prefer a more diverse society

Masonic Medical Research Institute publishes breakthrough study on combating heart disease linked to obesity and high-fat diet

How our body keeps time in the heat

Not just a messenger: Developing nano-sized delivery agents that also provide therapeutic treatment

AI used for real-time selection of actionable messages for government and public health campaigns

Sorting without comparators: The rise of intelligent memory systems

Access to green spaces may be linked to lower risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children

Teens are using dating apps more than you’d think. It may not be a bad thing.

AI chatbots remain overconfident -- even when they’re wrong

From hydrogen bonds to high performance: The future of aqueous batteries

Ancient brachiopods used tiny bristles to maintain “social distancing,” study reveals

320 million trees are killed by lightning each year — Considerable biomass loss

Research alert: Gene signature an early warning system for aggressive pancreatic cancer, study finds

The Covid-19 pandemic may have aged our brains, according to a new study

Pitt study uncovers how the immune system fends off gut parasites

Tiny fossil suggests spiders and their relatives originated in the sea

Psychological and physical health of a preterm birth cohort at age 35

Leading the way comes at a cost for feathered friends

Psychedelics and cannabis offer treatment hope for people with eating disorders

[Press-News.org] Masonic Medical Research Institute publishes breakthrough study on combating heart disease linked to obesity and high-fat diet
The study highlights the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B, a nodal enzyme involved in insulin signaling, as a key driver in maladaptive cardiac metabolism and dysfunction under dietary stres