Fuente: Research » News
  Expuesto el: viernes, 11 de mayo de 2012 9:30
  Autor: g.maul
  Asunto: Scientists identify protein that stimulates brown fat to burn  calories
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 Scientists have    identified a protein which regulates the activation of brown fat in both the    brain and the body’s tissues.  Their research, which was conducted in    mice, was published today, Friday 11 May, in the journal Cell. Unlike white fat, which    functions primarily to store up fat, brown fat (also known as brown adipose    tissue) burns fats to generate heat in a process known as    thermogenesis.  The research, led by scientists at the University of    Cambridge Metabolic Research Laboratories at the Institute of Metabolic    Science, discovered that the protein BMP8B acts on a specific metabolic system    (which operates in the brain and the tissues) to regulate brown fat, making    it a potential therapeutic target. The scientists believe    that activating brown fat could help to support current weight loss    programmes, which individuals often struggle to maintain. Dr Andrew Whittle, one of    the authors of the paper from the Institute of Metabolic Science, said: “Other proteins made by the body    can enhance heat production in brown fat, such as thyroid hormone but often    these proteins have important effects in other organs too. Therefore they are    not good targets for developing new weight loss treatments. However, BMP8B    seems to be very specific for regulating the heat producing activity of brown    fat, making it a more ideal mechanism for new therapies.” The experiments showed    that when mice lacked the protein BMP8B they found it more difficult to    maintain their normal body temperature. They also became much more obese than    normal mice, particularly when fed a high-fat diet.  Additionally, when    the researchers treated brown fat cells with BMP8B they responded more    strongly to activation by the nervous system. Furthermore, when BMP8B was    administered to specific parts of the brain it increased the amount of    nervous activation of brown adipose tissue.  The result was that these    BMP8B-treated brown fat cells burned more fat and mice given BMP8B in the    brain lost weight. Professor Toni    Vidal-Puig, lead author of the study from the Institute of Metabolic Science    and a member of the MRC Centre for Obesity and Related Metabolic Diseases,    said:  “A major    feature of current weight-loss strategies is that people lose a lot of weight    early on, but then reach a plateau despite continuing to follow the same diet    regime. This is because the human body is incredibly good at sensing a reduction    in food consumption and slows the metabolic rate to compensate. A strategy to    increase brown fat activity could potentially be used in conjunction with    current weight loss strategies to help prevent the typical decrease in a    person’s metabolic rate. “One could be    sceptical that techniques to increase metabolic rate might just be    compensated by the body trying to make you want to eat more, to fuel this    increased metabolism. But our findings showed that treating mice with Bmp8b    did not have this effect, it simply made them lose weight by burning more fat    in their brown adipose tissue. “There are obvious    differences between mice and humans, and from a therapeutic perspective this    work is preliminary. Validation will be necessary to see if manipulating BMP8B    would be safe and effective in humans.” The research was funded    by the Medical Research Council (MRC), the Wellcome Trust, and the    Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC). This work is licensed    under a Creative Commons    Licence. If you use this content on your site please link back to this    page. Please enable JavaScript    to view the comments powered by    Disqus. 
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