Fat and Aging |
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Fat and Aging |
7-May 2008, 05:58 AM
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#1
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Threadstarter 7-Apr 2006 Posts: 322 |
Interesting article. I'm wondering how much relevance it has to aging.
http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews...ame=scienceNews QUOTE Scientists find something good about a big bottom By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO (Reuters) - A type of fat that accumulates around the hips and bottom may actually offer some protection against diabetes, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday. They said subcutaneous fat, or fat that collects under the skin, helped to improve sensitivity to the hormone insulin, which regulates blood sugar. Mice that got transplants of this type of fat deep into their abdomens lost weight and their fat cells shrank, even though they made no changes in their diet or activity levels. "It was a surprising result," said Dr. Ronald Kahn of Harvard Medical School in Boston, whose study appears in the journal Cell Metabolism. "We actually found it had a beneficial effect, and it was especially true when you put it inside the abdomen," Kahn said in a telephone interview. Kahn said he started the study to find out why fat located in different parts of the body seems to have different risks of metabolic disease such as diabetes. Researchers have known for some time that fat that collects in the abdomen -- known as visceral fat -- can raise a person's risk of diabetes and heart disease, while people with pear-shaped bodies, with fat deposits in the buttocks and hips, are less prone to these disorders. Now it turns out that subcutaneous fat -- fat found just under the skin -- may be actively protecting people from metabolic disease. Kahn and colleagues conducted a series of experiments on mice where they transplanted subcutaneous fat from donor mice into the bellies and under the skin of mice. Mice that got subcutaneous fat transplanted into their bellies started to slim down after several weeks, and they also showed improved blood sugar and insulin levels compared to mice that underwent a sham procedure. "What we found was that when we put it in either place, there was some improvement in metabolism," Kahn said. "I think it's an important result because not only does it say that not all fat is bad, but I think it points to a special aspect of fat where we need to do more research," he said. Kahn's team is working to find the substances produced in subcutaneous fat that provide the benefit with the hope of developing a drug that might copy this effect. Although fat is known to produce several hormones, Kahn said none of the known hormones appeared to be involved in this process. "If we can capture those (substances), we might have an opportunity to convert them into drugs or use them as guides to help develop drugs," he said. |
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7-May 2008, 03:59 PM
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#2
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Exe Director23-Aug 2002 Posts: 5,325 Wausau, WI |
I had heard and read several times in the past the the pear-shaped body was less likely to develop the problems normally associated with too much fat/being overweight.
QUOTE Kahn's team is working to find the substances produced in subcutaneous fat that provide the benefit with the hope of developing a drug that might copy this effect. Anyone have any speculations on what those substances might be? |
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7-May 2008, 09:06 PM
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#3
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Navigator 14-Dec 2006 Posts: 1,955 Philadelphia |
This is a really interesting result. I wonder if they transplanted any visceral fat to a subcutaneous site? If that was not harmful, then you would have evidence that there is something special going on in the abdomen. Maybe a short-lived species that acts on abdominal receptors and triggers some sort of process. As to the nature of the messenger, assuming there is one, I have no idea. A peptide wouldn't surprise me, but not that many years ago, who would have thought that nitric oxide had a biochemical role? In other words, it could be practically anything.
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9-May 2008, 04:23 AM
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#4
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Member 15-Jan 2008 Posts: 265 Sweden |
If the body didn't store fat at all we would get diabetic very fast by eating sugar....
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9-May 2008, 07:44 AM
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#5
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Navigator15-Jun 2005 Posts: 3,624 Auburn, AL |
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Go ad free, join ImmInst as a Full Member. |
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