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'Brown fat' may be a key to curing obesity
By manipulating levels of the protein BMP-7, Harvard Medical School researchers were able to generate a larger store of "brown" fat cells that burn calories--a pathway that could be used to pursue new therapies to fight obesity and a range of metabolic diseases. Mice injected with the protein reportedly developed more of the brown fat tissue and gained less weight.
It turns out that there are two kinds of fat: Brown and white. Brown fat is more prevalent in infants and has a key role to play in metabolism. And it is generated by the same precursor cells that produce muscle. In a separate study, researchers identified a "master regulator" protein--PRDM16--that pushes the cells to develop along different paths.
"I think we now have very convincing evidence that PRDM16 can turn cells into brown fat cells, with the possibility of combating obesity," says Bruce Spiegelman of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
- read the story from AFP
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Comments
These findings are interesting to me in that it begs the question: Are these proteins which increase the calorie burning "brown fat" cells increased by natural means such as excercise? Indeed the obesity problem has gotten out of hand and certainly appears to warrant pharmacological manipulation. However, I would like to understand how nature exerts its influence with these proteins BMP-7 and PRDM16. This way, specific exercise or dietary means may be prescribed as well to augment the process.
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