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Fat
Cells Communicate with Nerve Cells
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Researchers have discovered that fat
cells have the ability to communicate with nerve cells outside
the brain and may have more control over their own destiny than
previously thought.
In the study, the researchers grew fat cells and nerve cells
in the same container separated by a thin membrane.
The investigators found that the fat cells sent a chemical signal
to the nerve cells to increase production of neuropeptide Y (NPY).
NPY is a chemical known to signal the brain to stop burning fat
and to start eating.
However, the exact chemical that is secreted by the fat cells
to tell nerve cells to make NPY is still unknown, according to
Dr. Christine Turtzo of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
in Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues. Their findings are published
in the October 16th issue of the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
Based on the current findings, Turtzo told Reuters Health that
nerve cells outside the brain have the ability to secrete NPY
and keep fat cells in storage, as opposed to using them for energy
output.
Essentially, there are ``fat cells telling the nerve cells, 'Don't
stimulate me,''' co-author Dr. Daniel Lane told Reuters Health
in an interview.
The researchers hope that the findings will help them to understand
more about why certain types of fat cells are more likely to be
associated with ill health.
For instance, people with a greater proportion of fat cells that
are stored in the abdomen region of the body as opposed to those
stored underneath the skin anywhere in the body are more likely
to suffer from cardiovascular disease and diabetes, Turtzo explained.
``We don't know why the two different types of fat cells behave
differently, but we know that fat in the abdomen has a greater
amount of nerves associated with them,'' she added.
``If you can control what the fat cell is doing then you might
be able to control the problem (of obesity),'' Lane said.
SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2001;98:12385-
Reference
Source 89
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