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

Study uncovers protein key to fighting and preventing obesity

2013-01-07
(Press-News.org) GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- University of Florida researchers and colleagues have identified a protein that, when absent, helps the body burn fat and prevents insulin resistance and obesity.

The findings from the National Institutes of Health-funded study were published online ahead of print Sunday, Jan. 6, in the journal Nature Medicine.

The discovery could aid development of drugs that not only prevent obesity, but also spur weight loss in people who are already overweight, said Stephen Hsu, M.D., Ph.D., one of the study's corresponding authors and a principal investigator with the UF Sid Martin Biotechnology Development Institute.

One-third of adults and about 17 percent of children in the United States are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Although unrelated studies have shown that lifestyle changes such as choosing healthy food over junk food and increasing exercise can help reduce obesity, people are often unable to maintain these changes over time, Hsu said.

"The problem is when these studies end and the people go off the protocols, they almost always return to old habits and end up eating the same processed foods they did before and gain back the weight they lost during the study," he said. Developing drugs that target the protein, called TRIP-Br2, and mimic its absence may allow for the prevention of obesity without relying solely on lifestyle modifications, Hsu said.

First identified by Hsu, TRIP-Br2 helps regulate how fat is stored in and released from cells. To understand its role, the researchers compared mice that lacked the gene responsible for production of the protein, with normal mice that had the gene.

They quickly discovered that mice missing the TRIP-Br2 gene did not gain weight no matter what they ate — even when placed on a high-fat diet — and were otherwise normal and healthy. On the other hand, the mice that still made TRIP-Br2 gained weight and developed associated problems such as insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes and high cholesterol when placed on a high-fat diet. The normal and fat-resistant mice ate the same amount of food, ruling out differences in food intake as a reason why the mice lacking TRIP-Br2 were leaner.

"We had to explain why the animals eating so much fat were remaining lean and not getting high cholesterol. Where was this fat going?" Hsu said. "It turns out this protein is a master regulator. It coordinates expression of a lot of genes and controls the release of the fuel form of fat and how it is metabolized."

When functioning normally, TRIP-Br2 restricts the amount of fat that cells burn as energy. But when TRIP-Br2 is absent, a fat-burning fury seems to occur in fat cells. Although other proteins have been linked to the storage and release of fat in cells, TRIP-Br2 is unique in that it regulates how cells burn fat in a few different ways, Hsu said. When TRIP-Br2 is absent, fat cells dramatically increase the release of free fatty acids and also burn fat to produce the molecular fuel called ATP that powers mitochondria — the cell's energy source. In addition, cells free from the influence of TRIP-Br2 start using free fatty acids to generate thermal energy, which protects the body from exposure to cold.

"TRIP-Br2 is important for the accumulation of fat," said Rohit N. Kulkarni, M.D., Ph.D., also a senior author of the paper and an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and the Joslin Diabetes Center. "When an animal lacks TRIP-Br2, it can't accumulate fat."

Because the studies were done mostly in mice, additional studies are still needed to see if the findings translate to humans.

"We are very optimistic about the translational promise of our findings because we showed that only human subjects who had the kind of fat (visceral) that becomes insulin-resistant also had high protein levels of TRIP-Br2," Hsu said.

"Imagine you are able to develop drugs that pharmacologically mimic the complete absence of TRIP-Br2," Hsu said. "If a patient started off fat, he or she would burn the weight off. If people are at risk of obesity and its associated conditions, such as type 2 diabetes, it would help keep them lean regardless of how much fat they ate. That is the ideal anti-obesity drug, one that prevents obesity and helps people burn off excess weight."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Living cells behave like fluid-filled sponges

2013-01-07
Animal cells behave like fluid-filled sponges in response to being mechanically deformed according to new research published today in Nature Materials. Scientists from the London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN) at UCL have shown that animal cells behave according to the theory of 'poroelasticity' when mechanically stimulated in a way similar to that experienced in organs within the body. The results indicate that the rate of cell deformation in response to mechanical stress is limited by how quickly water can redistribute within the cell interior. Poroelasticity was ...

Protein essential for healthy eyes described by Hebrew University, US researchers

Protein essential for healthy eyes described by Hebrew University, US researchers
2013-01-07
Jerusalem, January 6, 2013 – Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in collaboration with researchers at the Salk Institute in California, have found for the first time that a specific protein is essential not only for maintaining a healthy retina in the eye, but also may have implications for understanding and possibly treating other conditions in the immune, reproductive, vascular and nervous systems, as well as in various cancers. Their work, reported online in the journal Neuron, highlights the role of Protein S in the maintenance of a healthy retina ...

International study suggests human genes influence gut microbial composition

2013-01-07
New research led by the Karolinska Institutet, Sweden and the University of Glasgow, Scotland, has identified a link between a human gene and the composition of human gastrointestinal bacteria. In a study published as a letter to the journal Gut, the team outline new evidence suggesting that the human genome may play a role in determining the makeup of the billions of microbes in the human gastrointestinal tract collectively known as the gut microbiota. Mauro D'Amato, Associate Professor at the Department of Biosciences and Nutrition at Karolinska Institutet, said: ...

Physical education requirement at 4-year universities at all-time low

Physical education requirement at 4-year universities at all-time low
2013-01-07
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Even as policy makers and health experts point to an increased need for exercise, more than half of four-year colleges and universities in the United States have dropped physical education requirements compared to historic levels. Almost every U.S. college student was required to take physical education and exercise requirements in the 1920s; today, that number is at an all-time low of 39 percent, according to a new study. Oregon State University researcher Brad Cardinal, lead author of the study, examined data from 354 randomly selected four-year ...

Pollen exposure during pregnancy affects child's risk of early asthma

2013-01-07
A woman's exposure to high pollen levels in late pregnancy increases the risk of early asthma in the child, according to a group of researchers at Sweden's Umeå University in a recent study. A number of studies have previously shown that there is an association with being born during a pollen season and an increased risk of allergies. Although the pollen season is a regular annual event, there are large variations between years in pollen levels. Few studies have closely examined the significance of actual pollen content in different time periods before and after birth, ...

Massive outburst in neighbor galaxy surprises astronomers

2013-01-07
The surprising discovery of a massive outburst in a neighboring galaxy is giving astronomers a tantalizing look at what likely is a powerful belch by a gorging black hole at the galaxy's center. The scientists were conducting a long-term study of molecules in galaxies, when one of the galaxies showed a dramatic change. "The discovery was entirely serendipitous. Our observations were spread over a few years, and when we looked at them, we found that one galaxy had changed over that time from being placid and quiescent, to undergoing a hugely energetic outburst at the end," ...

Major cuts to surging CO2 emissions are needed now, not down the road, study finds

2013-01-07
Irvine, Calif., Jan. 7, 2013 – Halting climate change will require "a fundamental and disruptive overhaul of the global energy system" to eradicate harmful carbon dioxide emissions, not just stabilize them, according to new findings by UC Irvine and other scientists. In a Jan. 9 paper in Environmental Research Letters, UC Irvine Earth system scientist Steve Davis and others take a fresh look at the popular "wedge" approach to tackling climate change outlined in a 2004 study by Princeton scientists Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow. They had argued that the rise of dangerous ...

Dark matter made visible before the final cut

Dark matter made visible before the final cut
2013-01-07
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Research findings from the University of North Carolina School of Medicine are shining a light on an important regulatory role performed by the so-called dark matter, or "junk DNA," within each of our genes. The new study reveals snippets of information contained in dark matter that can alter the way a gene is assembled. "These small sequences of genetic information tell the gene how to splice, either by enhancing the splicing process or inhibiting it. The research opens the door for studying the dark matter of genes. And it helps us further understand ...

Italian immigrants live longer

2013-01-07
Although immigrants from Italy and their offspring form one of the largest demographic groups in Switzerland, there are hardly any studies on their state of health and risk of mortality. In a first for Switzerland, Silvan Tarnutzer and Matthias Bopp from the University of Zurich's Institute of Social and Preventative Medicine calculated unbiased mortality risks for people with an Italian migrant background. Immigrants from Italy live longer than Swiss people Compared to Swiss people born in Switzerland, immigrant Italians exhibit a mortality risk that is roughly ten ...

Sublingual immunotherapy shows promise as treatment for peanut allergy

Sublingual immunotherapy shows promise as treatment for peanut allergy
2013-01-07
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Peanuts are one of the most common triggers of severe food-induced allergic reactions, which can be fatal, and the prevalence of peanut allergy is increasing. However, there is currently no clinical treatment available for peanut allergy other than strict dietary elimination and, in cases of accidental ingestion, injections of epinephrine. But a new multicenter clinical trial shows promise for sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT), a treatment in which patients are given daily doses, in gradually increasing amounts, of a liquid containing peanut powder. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

VR study reveals how pain and fear weaken sense of body ownership

Quantum leap: Graphene unlocks orbital hybridization

How black holes could nurture life

Dr. Amit Bar-Or, penn medicine neuroimmunologist, awarded the 2025 John Dystel prize for multiple sclerosis research

Recent study in mice provides key insights on the impact of excessive sucrose consumption in specific organs

A less toxic way to manufacture daily goods

Nearly half of depression diagnoses could be considered treatment-resistant

Deadly bacteria developed the ability to produce antimicrobials and wiped-out competitors

Device enables direct communication among multiple quantum processors

Nanotech-induced cooling improves crop yields in arid climates

Home sweet home: some great hammerhead sharks stick to the perfect neighborhood in the Bahamas instead of migrating

Bubbly idea: Ultrafine bubble showers suppress atopic dermatitis

Aotearoa once home to elephant seals

Green recipe: Engineered yeast boosts D-lactic acid production

Computational drug discovery: Exploring natural products targeting SARS-CoV-2

Almost half of children with complicated appendicitis can recover from surgery at home

Sensory t-shirt collects patient data and enables shorter postoperative hospital stay

Worse outcomes for men who avoid prostate cancer screening

Shrinking Andean glaciers threaten water supply of 90 million people, global policy makers warne

Women’s earnings fall 10% four years after menopause diagnosis

Researchers capture first laser-driven, high-resolution CT scans of dense objects 

Cambridge team uses powerful new MRI scans to enable life-changing surgery in first for adults with epilepsy

NRL's narrow field imager launches on NASA's PUNCH mission

Galapagos birds exhibit ‘road rage’ due to noise

Groundbreaking study finds AI-driven interviews with children may boost accuracy in witness accounts

New framework to measure economic well-being considers new and free goods and services; addition of digital goods boosts growth

Augmented reality guidance for placing intracranial drains now clinically validated

How feathers develop in chickens

Insomniac fruit fly mutants show enhanced memory despite severe sleep loss

Seals can sense their own circulating blood oxygen and it keeps them from drowning

[Press-News.org] Study uncovers protein key to fighting and preventing obesity