UCLA/VA Researchers Discover
Fat Gene
posted
January 24, 2005
Finding may offer new target for controlling
obesity, diabetes
UCLA/VA scientists have identified a new gene that controls
how the body produces and uses fat. Called lipin, the gene may provide a new
target for therapies to control obesity, diabetes and other weight-related
disorders. The first issue of the new journal Cell Metabolism publishes the
findings in its January 2005 edition.
"Lipin regulates how the body stores and burns fat. Our
findings suggest that differences in lipin levels may play a role in why some
people are more prone to weight gain than others who consume the same calories,"
said principal investigator Karen Reue, Ph.D., a professor of medicine and human
genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a researcher at the
Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System.
In 2001, Reue's laboratory was the first to isolate the lipin
gene and link it to lipodystrophy, a wasting disorder in which the body is
unable to produce fat. She also found that too little lipin prevented both
genetic and diet-related obesity.
For this study, Reue and coauthor Jack Phan, Ph.D., tested
whether too much lipin would produce the opposite effect. Her team developed
animal models using two sets of specially bred mice. Each group had a genetic
mutation that boosted the level of lipin – one group in their fat tissue and the
other group in their muscles.
When fed a high-fat diet for six weeks, the mice with elevated
lipin in their fat or muscles showed accelerated weight gain – double the amount
of weight gained by the normal mice.
"The mice with too much lipin in their fat tissue or muscles
quickly grew obese – gaining more than twice the weight gained by the normal
mice on the same diet," said Reue.
Although both sets of mice gained excessive weight, the
researchers were surprised to see that the lipin affected fat tissue and muscles
differently.
Lipin functions in diverse ways to affect body weight. While
lipin in fat tissue influences the capacity of cells to store fat – lipin in
muscle affects the rate at which the body expends energy and burns fat.
"When we increased lipin in the muscle, the cells burned
carbohydrates before fat. When lipin is absent, however, the cells burn fat
before carbohydrates," explained Reue.
"We saw a different effect when lipin acted on fat tissue,"
she noted. "High levels of lipin promoted fat storage. Lipin deficiency
prevented the cells from forming and storing fat."
In other words, the mice with excess lipin in their fat gained
weight because their cells stored more fat. The mice with more lipin in their
muscle grew obese because the gene repressed their metabolism, causing them to
burn fewer calories than normal mice.
In contrast, Reue's study showed that lipin-deficient mice
expended more energy to perform their daily activities. Because lipin moderates
calorie use in muscle, its absence caused the mice to burn more calories to
fulfill the same tasks as normal mice.
"Our study suggests that variations in lipin levels could
determine a person's tendency to gain weight by influencing how their body
stores and burns fat," explained Reue.
"Prior to our research, scientists typically viewed obesity
and emaciation as opposite ends of the spectrum caused by changes in different
genes," Reue said. "Yet lipin is a single gene that can regulate body-fat
content from one extreme to the other. As a result, it may present a target for
the treatment of human diseases related to both excess and insufficient fat."
In an unexpected finding, the study also discovered that lipin
levels helped the fat cells metabolize glucose more efficiently, leading to
lower blood-sugar levels. The obese mice with excess lipin in their fat tissue
demonstrated even lower blood-sugar levels than normal mice with regular levels
of lipin.
"Because obesity and lipodystrophy are both associated with
insulin resistance and high blood sugar, we hope that our results may point to
new therapies for diabetes," said Reue.
Source: UCLA: The National Institute of Heart, Lung and Blood
funded the research. Phan, a student in the medical scientist-training program
at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, co-authored the study.
January 2005 News Article Index