Understanding How Obese Fat Cells Work
Main Category: Obesity / Weight Loss / FitnessAlso Included In: Biology / Biochemistry
Article Date: 30 Aug 2007 - 1:00 PDT
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In obese individuals, fat cells are bloated and inflamed because they receive too many nutrients, including lipids. In these cells, various components cannot work properly anymore and, instead, they activate new proteins to cope with the situation. One of the most challenged organelles in obese fat cells is a maze-like compartment called the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) that makes proteins and lipid droplets and senses the amount of nutrients that enter the cell.
Margaret F. Gregor and Gokhan S. Hotamisligil review current knowledge about how the ER works in fat cells and is modified in obesity. They show that when a fat cell receives too many nutrients, the ER is overwhelmed and triggers a process called the unfolded protein response (UPR). This process is one of many cellular responses that activate proteins that increase inflammation and can even result in the death of the cell. UPR also causes insulin resistance, a condition in which the production and function of insulin - a hormone produced by the pancreas - is impaired and blood sugar is too high.
The scientists show that by better understanding how the ER works, it may be possible to devise a therapy that enhances the function of the ER and maybe improve the health of obese people. Already, two molecules that protect the ER from obesity-related stress have shown some success in mice. Called PBA and TUDCA, the molecules decreased blood sugar and insulin levels and improved overall response to insulin production.
ER stress may also be reduced by targeting molecules involved in the UPR process. For example, a drug called Salubrinal was recently shown to inhibit one of the UPR-involved molecules and to protect cells from ER stress-induced cell death. Also, there is emerging evidence that anti-diabetic drugs may also work, at least in part, through this mechanism.
A deeper knowledge of how fat cells become dysfunctional will be critical in devising successful therapies in the future, the scientists conclude.
Article: "Adipocyte stress: the endoplasmic reticulum and metabolic disease," by Margaret F. Gregor and Gokhan S. Hotamisligil
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A Psychobiological Diet
posted by Prof. Dr. Mohamed Elhashemy on 2 Sep 2007 at 4:22 amI think that in obesity many factors other than the endoplasmic reticulum will affect the fate of fat cells, hence the body weight. It is known that fat cells in obese people are bloated with fat. I think that this fat compresses the mitochondria and this leads to lowering of its activity, consequently lowering RMR and accumulation of excess fat in side the fat cells. This leads to the steady increase in the body weight.
One of the success factors of my Luqaimat Diet - innovated in 2005 - is the smooth reduction in the daily food volumes, therefore the caloric intake, hence the gradual release of pressure inside the fat cells. The net result will be reestablishment of the activity of the mitochondria.
In my referenced study on 313 patients I found an astonishing fact: the loss of weight during the first ten weeks was on the average of 6 Kg. The weight loss in the following ten weeks averaged 9 Kg. This is in contrast to most famous diets. Those patients applied the Luqaimat Training Technique "LTT", which depends mainly on supplying the body daily with several micro-meals of minimal volumes sufficient enough to keep fit, regardless of the calories. It seems that this technique caused a natural and gradual reduction of size of fat droplets inside the fat cells. In turn, this causes pressure release on the mitochondria, hence the increase in the total body metabolism and so the rate of weight loss increased.
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