New research published in The Journal of Physiology identifies a novel protein that reduces the likelihood of obesity and related metabolic disorders in boys.
It is well-known that unhealthy parental lifestyles and health conditions including obesity (particularly from the mothers) are linked to an increased risk of obesity, diabetes and other metabolic disorders in children. However, the underlying mechanism has not been clearly understood.
This new research focuses on the protein SIRT1, which is an important regulator of metabolism and stress responses. The bulk of previous studies suggest that SIRT1 plays important roles in age-related diseases. This new finding links the development of childhood metabolic disorders in males due to obesity in mothers to reduced SIRT1 levels in these offspring. In other words, when the level of SIRT1 is increased in the male offspring, excessive weight gain is halted, blood sugar regulation is improved, and the levels of fat in the blood and liver of these offspring are reduced.
The research involved breeding females on a high fat diet with male mice genetically-modified to have an additional SIRT1 gene. Male offspring were either normal or had increased levels of SIRT1. These pups were then examined for signs of developing metabolic diseases.
The first author on the study, commented on the findings:
"Gestational weight control and current therapeutic practices are ineffective in preventing the effects of maternal obesity on the next generation. Our study provides evidence of SIRT1 countering metabolic disorders in offspring of mothers on high fat diets, making it a promising therapeutic target in humans.
Further studies involving an investigation of the offspring in adulthood, and also their children, are being conducted to understand the prolonged and intergenerational effects of SIRT1 therapy.
https://physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1113/JP276957
http://sciencemission.com/site/index.php?page=news&type=view&id=health-science%2Fsirt1-overexpression&filter=8%2C9%2C10%2C11%2C12%2C13%2C14%2C16%2C17%2C18%2C19%2C20%2C27&redirected=1
Stress Protein to Prevent Childhood Obesity in Males
- 864 views
- Added
Edited
Latest News
How non-alcoholic fatty liver disease increases risk of vascular diseases
What happens when plants have stress reactions to touch
Mutation impairs ion channel trafficking in epilepsy
Mutations in a gene could cause a birth defect involving extra fingers or toes
Cornea T cells protecting eyes from viral infections
Other Top Stories
How blood vessels protect the brain during inflammation
Patients lacking CCR5 recover better from mild stroke!
How diabetes causes muscle loss
Cardiac macrophages are essential for forming heart valves
Diabetes and back pain linked?
Protocols
Prediction of protein-ligand binding affinity from sequencing data with interpretable machine lea…
Integrating neuroimaging and gene expression data using the imaging transcriptomics toolbox
Antibody structure prediction using interpretable deep learning
A semi-automated workflow for brain Slice Histology Alignment, Registration, and Cell Quantificat…
NanoDam identifies Homeobrain (ARX) and Scarecrow (NKX2.1) as conserved temporal factors in the D…
Publications
Endothelial-immune crosstalk contributes to vasculopathy in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
The lncRNA PILA promotes NF-B signaling in osteoarthritis by stimulating the activity ofthe prot…
Touch signaling and thigmomorphogenesis are regulated by complementary CAMTA3- and JA-dependent p…
Metabolic adaptation of lymphocytes in immunity and disease
An epilepsy-associated KV1.2 charge-transfer-center mutation impairs KV1.2 and KV1.4 trafficking
Presentations
Hydrogels in Drug Delivery
Lipids
Cell biology of carbohydrate metabolism
RNA interference (RNAi)
RNA structure and functions
Posters
ASCO-2020-HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH AND QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
ASCO-2020-HEAD AND NECK CANCER
ASCO-2020-GENITOURINARY CANCER–KIDNEY AND BLADDER
ASCO-2020-GENITOURINARY CANCER–PROSTATE, TESTICULAR, AND PENILE
ASCO-2020-GYNECOLOGIC CANCER