Gaining weight from overeating is a problem faced
by many adults, and now scientists have apparently discovered
one reason why.
In experiments with rats, researchers found that the
hormone leptin, which helps burn fat in fat cells called
adipocytes, becomes ineffective, allowing for weight gain
from overeating.
"The cells that make leptin are fat cells -- the cells
that store the fat," said lead researcher Dr. Roger H.
Unger, a professor of internal medicine and director of
the Touchstone Center for Diabetes Research at the University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas.
This dichotomy has led to a question that's only now
being answered, Unger said. "Why would cells that have
as their main function fat storage produce a hormone that
would prevent fat storage by burning up all the fat?"
he said. "How is it possible that these cells produce
a fat-burning hormone, and yet store a huge amount of
fat?"
Unger's team found that when rats are overfed and made
obese, the receptor for leptin, which makes fat burn up,
disappears from the fat cell. "So the leptin produced
by the fat cell will not come back and act on the fat
cell," Unger said. "That way the cell can be smothered
by leptin, but the leptin can't work."
There is an evolutionary reason for this, Unger said.
"We think of obesity as bad, but in fact throughout evolution,
obesity is the only way we survived famine. The people
who were most efficient in storing fat were the people
who survived," he said. "Obesity is nature's way of surviving
famine."
The new research appears in this week's online edition
of the
Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
In another experiment, the researchers overfed genetically
altered rats that couldn't lose the leptin receptors in
their fat cells. "We make these animals overeat, but they
don't lose the leptin receptor on the fat cells," Unger
said. "When that happens, they can't get fat, because
the leptin is acting on the fat cell burning up the fat."
The key to preventing obesity is to prevent the loss
of the leptin receptor on the fat cell, Unger said. His
team is continuing its research with humans, where early
results appear similar to what was found in rats.
Unger believes that researchers could one day use this
information to invent a drug that would prevent leptin
receptors in fat cells from disappearing.
There's an easier way to prevent obesity, however, he
said: "Just don't put so much food into your mouth. It
is questionable to use this finding as a substitute for
willpower."
But one expert thinks these findings are an important
breakthrough in understanding obesity.
"Although obese people produce a lot of leptin, somehow
they don't stop eating," said Dr. Julio Licinio, a professor
of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences and endocrinology
at the David Geffen School of Medicine, University of
California, Los Angeles.
Before you can develop drugs to treat obesity, you have
to understand what makes people become obese, Licinio
said. "This paper shows a mechanism for the inactivation
of leptin. This is really a big breakthrough, because
understanding this mechanism could really lead to new
treatments for obesity."
- More articles on Obesity
Reference
Source 101
November
22, 2005