Yale scientists uncover how a molecular process in the brain that
known to control eating transforms white fat into brown fat, impacting
how much energy we burn and how much weight we can lose.
The results are published in the October 9 issue of the journal Cell.
Obesity is a rising global epidemic. Excess fatty tissue is a major
risk factor for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hypertension,
neurological disorders, and cancer. People become overweight and obese
when energy intake exceeds energy expenditure, and excess calories are
stored in the adipose tissues. The adipose organ is made up of both
white and brown fat. While white fat primarily stores energy as
triglycerides, brown fat dissipates chemical energy as heat. The more
brown fat you have, the more weight you can lose.
It has previously been shown that energy-storing white fat has the
capacity to transform into energy-burning “brown-like” fat. In this new
study, researchers from the Yale Program in Integrative Cell Signaling
and Neurobiology of Metabolism, demonstrate that neurons controlling
hunger and appetite in the brain control the “browning” of white fat.
Lead author Xiaoyong Yang, associate professor of comparative
medicine and physiology at Yale School of Medicine, conducted the study
with Tamas Horvath, professor and chair of comparative medicine, and
professor of neurobiology and Obstetrics/gynecology at Yale School of
Medicine, and their co-authors.
The team stimulated this browning process from the brain in mice and
found that it protected the animals from becoming obese on a high-fat
diet. The team then studied the molecular changes in hunger-promoting
neurons in the hypothalamus and found that the attachment of a unique
sugar called “O-GlcNAc” to potassium ion channels acts as a switch to
control brain activity to burn fat.
“Our studies reveal white fat “browning” as a highly dynamic
physiological process that the brain controls,” said Yang. “This work
indicates that behavioral modifications promoted by the brain could
influence how the amount of food we eat and store in fat is burned.”
Yang said hunger and cold exposure are two life-history variables
during the development and evolution of mammals. “We observed that food deprivation dominates over cold exposure in neural control of white fat
browning. This regulatory system may be evolutionarily important as it
can reduce heat production to maintain energy balance when we are
hungry. Modulating this brain-to-fat connection represents a potential
novel strategy to combat obesity and associated illnesses.”
Other authors on the study include Hai-Bin Ruan, Marcelo O. Dietrich,
Zhong-Wu Liu, Marcelo R. Zimmer, Min-Dian Li, Jay Prakash Singh, Kaisi
Zhang, Ruonan Yin, and Jing Wu.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, American
Diabetes Association, Ellison Medical Foundation, American Heart
Association, and CNPq/Brazil.
Publication: Hai-Bin Ruan, et al., “O-GlcNAc
Transferase Enables AgRP Neurons to Suppress Browning of White Fat,”
Cell, Volume 159, Issue 2, p306–317, 9 October 2014;
doi:10.1016/j.cell.2014.09.010
Source: Karen N. Peart, Yale University
Image: Michael S. Helfenbein,via http://scitechdaily.com
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