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

Joslin scientists: Brown adipose tissue beneficial for metabolism and glucose tolerance

Findings may lead to new treatments for type 1 and type 2 diabetes

Joslin scientists: Brown adipose tissue beneficial for metabolism and glucose tolerance
2012-12-10
(Press-News.org) BOSTON – December 10, 2012 – Joslin Diabetes Center scientists have demonstrated that brown adipose tissue (BAT) has beneficial effects on glucose tolerance, body weight and metabolism. The findings, which may lead to new treatments for diabetes, appear in the upcoming issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Unlike the more prevalent white adipose tissue (WAT or white fat) which stores fat, BAT (or brown fat) burns fat to produce heat. Studies in mice and humans have suggested that BAT also plays a role in regulating body weight and metabolism. This has made BAT the focus of considerable interest among scientists and pharmaceutical companies who are investigating ways to use BAT as a treatment for obesity.

The Joslin researchers were interested in learning whether BAT is involved in glucose metabolism and uncovering the mechanisms underlying BAT's effects on metabolism and body weight. The study involved the transplantation of BAT from male donor mice into the visceral cavities of mice which were fed a standard or high-fat diet.

By eight to twelve weeks following transplantation, the BAT-transplanted mice fed a normal diet showed improved glucose tolerance, increased insulin sensitivity, lower body weights and decreased fat mass. Three control groups, which had a WAT transplant, a glass bead implant or surgery without transplantation, did not show any metabolic improvements. "We were able to establish that BAT transplantation affects metabolism. This study provides further evidence that BAT is a very important metabolic organ and a potential treatment for obesity-related diseases such as diabetes, metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance," says lead author Kristin I. Stanford, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the Section on Integrative Physiology and Metabolism.

The mice fed a high-fat diet also exhibited beneficial effects from BAT transplantation, including improved glucose metabolism, decreased body weight and a complete reversal of insulin resistance resulting from excess fat consumption. Previous studies of BAT transplantation in mice, which transplanted BAT in a different location and had a shorter duration, did not show beneficial effects.

The transplanted BAT affected metabolism throughout the body by increasing levels of circulating Interleukin-6 (IL-6). The researchers also found that BAT transplantation increased norepinephrine and FGF-21. IL-6 has been shown in previous studies to increase energy production and decrease body weight. When the researchers transplanted BAT from donor mice genetically engineered not to produce IL-6, the mice who received the transplants showed no metabolic improvements. "This is the first study to demonstrate that an increase in BAT significantly increases levels of circulating IL-6. It suggests that an increase in BAT-derived IL-6 improves glucose metabolism throughout the body," says senior author Laurie J. Goodyear, PhD, head of the Section on Integrative Physiology and Metabolism.

The researchers are following up on the study by "looking into other ways BAT may have beneficial metabolic effects and further investigating the functions of IL-6 and other BAT-derived hormones," says Dr. Goodyear. Dr. Stanford is studying the relationship between BAT and type 1 diabetes (T1D), based on data from a collaborator that suggests that BAT may help control glucose in T1D.

Dr. Goodyear and the research team are very interested in using their findings to develop new therapies for diabetes. "We hope that manipulating BAT will help people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes," says Dr. Goodyear.



INFORMATION:

Study co-authors include: Roeland J. W. Middelbeek, Kristy L. Townsend, Ding An, Eva B. Nygaard, Kristen M. Hitchcox, Kathleen R. Markan, Kazuhiro Nakano, Michael F. Hirshman, Yu-Hua Tseng, all of Joslin Diabetes Center.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Joslin scientists: Brown adipose tissue beneficial for metabolism and glucose tolerance

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Elk bones tell stories of life, death, and habitat use at Yellowstone National Park

Elk bones tell stories of life, death, and habitat use at Yellowstone National Park
2012-12-10
Josh Miller likes to call himself a conservation paleobiologist. The label makes sense when he explains how he uses bones as up-to-last-season information on contemporary animal populations. Bones, he says, provide baseline ecological data on animals complementary to aerial counts, adding a historical component to live observation. In his November cover article for the Ecological Society of America's journal Ecology, he assesses elk habitat use in Yellowstone National Park by their bones and antlers, testing his method against several decades of the Park Service's meticulous ...

New multiple myeloma drug shows promise in treating people with advanced disease

2012-12-10
A new oral agent under review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is safe and effective in treating relapsed and treatment-resistant multiple myeloma, according to a multicenter, Phase II study presented by Mount Sinai School of Medicine researchers at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting. The meeting is taking place December 8-11, 2012 in Atlanta. A multi-center research team evaluated 113 patients with multiple myeloma who had received at least two prior therapies and had subsequent disease progression to determine safety and efficacy of ...

Morning vs nighttime replacement affects adverse events with extended-wear contact lenses

2012-12-10
Philadelphia, Pa. (December 10, 2012) - For people using 30-day extended-wear/continuous-wear (EW/CW) contact lenses, replacing lenses at night doesn't lower the risk of complications compared to changing lenses monthly, suggests a study – "The Effect of Daily Lens Replacement During Overnight Wear on Ocular Adverse Events", appearing in the December issue of Optometry and Vision Science, official journal of the American Academy of Optometry. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part ofWolters Kluwer Health. In contrast, replacing lenses every ...

Face transplantation calls for 'reverse craniofacial planning'

2012-12-10
Philadelphia, Pa. (December 10, 2012) - As surgical teams gain experience with facial transplantation, a careful approach to planning based on the principles of craniofacial surgery can help to maximize patient outcomes in terms of facial form and function, according to an article in The Journal of Craniofacial Surgery. The journal, under the editorship of Mutaz B. Habal, MD, is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part ofWolters Kluwer Health. In patients with extensive facial defects including loss of the normal bone and soft tissue landmarks, a "reverse craniofacial ...

Survey shows breakthrough medical research relies heavily on NIH funding

2012-12-10
(ATLANTA, December 10, 2012) – A survey highlighting the correlation between today's cutting edge medical research and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding was released today at the 54th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH), the preeminent medical meeting for physicians and scientists in hematology that draws more than 20,000 attendees from around the world. The survey, representing responses from 1,040 abstract presenters from the U.S. and abroad, demonstrates how critical NIH funding has been to the success of science and medicine. "Every ...

The image of mental fatigue

2012-12-10
We all perhaps know the feeling of mental exhaustion, but what does it mean physiologically to have mental fatigue? A new study carried out using brain scans could help scientists uncover the neurobiological mechanisms underlying mental fatigue. According to Bui Ha Duc and Xiaoping Li of the National University of Singapore writing in a forthcoming issue of the International Journal Computer Applications in Technology, mental fatigue has become commonplace as many people face increasing mental demands from stressful jobs, longer working hours with less time to relax and ...

Researchers demonstrate that a saliva analysis can reveal decision-making skills

2012-12-10
A study conducted by researchers at the University of Granada Group of Neuropsychology and Clinical Psychoneuroimmunology has demonstrated that cortisol levels in saliva are associated with a person's ability to make good decisions in stressful situations. To perform this study, the researchers exposed the participants (all women) to a stressful situation by using sophisticated virtual reality technology. The study revealed that people who are not skilled in decision-making have lower baseline cortisol levels in saliva as compared to skilled people. Cortisol –known ...

Experiment finds ulcer bug's Achilles' heel

Experiment finds ulcer bugs Achilles heel
2012-12-10
Experiments at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have revealed a potential new way to attack common stomach bacteria that cause ulcers and significantly increase the odds of developing stomach cancer. The breakthrough, made using powerful X-rays from SLAC's Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL), was the culmination of five years of research into the bacterium Helicobacter pylori, which is so tough it can live in strong stomach acid. At least half the world's population carries H. pylori and hundreds of millions suffer ...

Frankincense is for life, not just for Christmas

2012-12-10
At this time of year it is hard to escape the Three Wise Men, riding their camels across Christmas cards and appearing in minature form in countless school nativity plays across the world, bearing their gifts for the infant Jesus. Whilst we are all familiar with gold (especialliy in this Olympic year), it is the mention of frankincense and myrrh that really says "Christmas" to us and and takes our imaginations back to ancient times. But you might be surprised to learn that these two fragrances are still big business today; for example, Ethiopia alone trades around 4000 ...

Oxytocin produces more engaged fathers and more responsive infants

2012-12-10
Philadelphia, PA, December 10, 2012 – A large body of research has focused on the ability of oxytocin to facilitate social bonding in both marital and parenting relationships in human females. A new laboratory study, led by Dr. Ruth Feldman from Bar-Ilan University in Israel and published in the current issue of Biological Psychiatry, has found that oxytocin administration to fathers increases their parental engagement, with parallel effects observed in their infants. Oxytocin is a neuropeptide that plays an important role in the formation of attachment bonds. Studies ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

3D lung model raises the bar for research

Lehigh Engineering faculty named Senior Members of the National Academy of Inventors

Researchers outline new approach for better understanding animal consciousness

Bioinspired robot collectives that can act like solids or fluids on demand

AI-assisted diagnosis for immunological disease

A new approach for breaking plastic waste down to monomers

High-performance computing at a crossroads

Chemists find greener path to making key industrial chemical

Giant X-ray facility shows that magnets can reduce flaws in 3D printed components

Cooling materials – Out of the 3D printer

New knowledge portal adiposetissue.org enhances obesity and metabolism research with centralized data

Study suggests new molecular strategy for treating fragile X syndrome

Digging into a decades-old hepatitis B mystery suggests a new potential treatment

Big birds like emus are technical innovators, according to University of Bristol researchers

Hidden genetic causes of congenital heart disease identified

Semaglutide and nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy

Inequities in the application of behavioral flags for hospitalized pediatric patients

Paxlovid’s impact on hospitalization and death in COVID-vaccinated older adults far weaker than previously thought

Additive manufacturing of biomedical metals for medical implant fabrication

Antioxidant-enzyme Interaction in non-communicable diseases

Turtles change nesting patterns in response to climate change

New research links grape consumption to improved muscle health in both men and women

Both sides of the coin: Lack of consensus on continuing vs. discontinuing opioid medications prescriptions for adults with chronic pain

National Academy of Inventors welcomes 162 emerging inventors

Narcissists more likely to feel ostracized

Unfolded protein response: A key regulator of intestinal health and disease

Small amounts of moderate to vigorous physical activity are associated with big reductions in dementia risk

Enhancing adhesive performance of polyvinyl alcohol with sub-nanoscale polyoxotungstate clusters under extreme conditions

Recognizing the evolution of clinical syndrome spectrum progression in individuals with single large-scale mitochondrial DNA deletion syndromes (SLSMDS))

Another way longer paternity leaves help new parents

[Press-News.org] Joslin scientists: Brown adipose tissue beneficial for metabolism and glucose tolerance
Findings may lead to new treatments for type 1 and type 2 diabetes