Contact:
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Disabling A Carb Trigger
Reduces Obesity And Appetite
BETHESDA, MD (August 30, 2006) – Until about 15 years
ago, insulin was believed primarily responsible for turning carbohydrates
into fat. But then it became apparent that diet alone could stimulate
glucose metabolism and fat synthesis, even when insulin levels were low or
absent.
Five years ago, researchers discovered that a substance
known as ChREBP (carbohydrate response element binding protein), quite
independent of insulin, initiated a sequence responsible for converting
excess carbohydrates to fatty acids for long-term storage.
In a study that appears in this month’s edition of the
American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, the same
laboratory that identified ChREBP (pronounced “kreb”) and its role in fat
storage has discovered that the absence of ChREBP in mice keeps normally
obese mice from becoming fat, lowers their blood triglycerides (a type of
fat) and reduces the insulin resistance related to type 2 diabetes
The research, titled “Deficiency of
carbohydrate-activated transcription factor ChREBP prevents obesity and
improves plasma glucose control in leptin-deficient (ob/ob) mice,” was
carried out by University of Texas researchers Katsumi Iizuka, Bonnie Miller
and Kosaku Uyeda of the UT Southwestern Medical Center, in Dallas. Uyeda is
also associated with the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Dallas. The
American Physiological Society published the study.
“Carbohydrates are broken down into glucose and other
simple sugars by digestion,” explained Uyeda, the principal investigator.
“These sugars enter the bloodstream and are mostly taken up by the liver.”
The liver does different things with the sugars, depending upon the body’s
energy needs. But if the body has enough energy, with the help of ChREBP, it
converts glucose into fatty acids and stores it.
“Many people believe that evolutionary pressure favored
those who could convert excess carbohydrate to fat and store it because they
were better able to survive food shortages,” said Uyeda. “Unfortunately for
the waistlines and health of many people today, the conversion of glucose
into fatty acids by the liver occurs all too readily.”
Mice without ChREBP
The researchers used four groups of mice. One group
lacked a functional ChREBP gene. Because these mice were unable to
synthesize ChREBP, they converted very little carbohydrate to fat and
remained relatively thin, even when they ate a very high carbohydrate diet,
Uyeda explained.
The second group was a strain of obese mice that do not
produce leptin, a hormone that tells us to stop eating when we are full,
Uyeda said. “Since these mice don’t make leptin, they eat large amounts of
food, become obese and develop symptoms of insulin resistance and type 2
diabetes,” he said.
The third group was a combination of the first two:
They did not produce leptin and so were prone to obesity but they also
lacked the functional ChREBP gene, which tends to keep mice lean. The fourth
group of normal mice acted as controls.
“We found that the third group (that did not have
ChREBP and did not produce leptin) did not become obese, had lower blood
glucose levels than the obese group and were less insulin resistant,” Uyeda
said. “We also were very surprised to find that these mice ate much less
than the obese mice of the second group.”
“These results show the important role ChREBP plays in
metabolism and appetite control in mice and, presumably, humans,” Uyeda
said. “Ultimately we hope to develop drugs to inactivate and control ChREBP
to overcome these two major health problems of obesity and diabetes.”
Research was supported by grants from the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the
National Institutes of Health and the Veterans Administration.
* * *
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