Islamabad, Jan 26 : Two independent studies in the journal Cell, a Cell Press
publication, suggest a common way to pump up muscles and prevent diabetes.
The key is a molecule required for fine-tuning metabolism by selectively
and subtly modifying core metabolic programs.
Researchers show that loss
of this molecule specifically in muscle produces mice with more fat-burning
muscle and greater exercise capacity. "We turned mice into super-marathon mice,"
said Johan Auwerx of École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. "They had more
stamina and more endurance."
Another group of researchers show that loss
of the same molecule specifically in fat cells produces mice that become more
insulin sensitive even as they grow fatter. Despite being fat, the mice are a
lot like animals on diabetes drugs known collectively as TZDs
(thiazolidinediones) minus the side effects of water rention and heart diesease.
"They were more glucose tolerant, even though they were more obese," said
Jerrold Olefsky of the University of California, San Diego. "They were less
insulin resistant and had less systemic inflammation -- all features common to
TZD treatment."
This molecule is is called NCoR. It integrates complex
signaling pathways, adjusting specific metabolic programs in a manner similar to
a dimmer switch, Auwerx explains. The particular genes it acts on apparently
vary with cell type.
These studies are surprising because earlier work
had shown that complete loss of NCoR early in development is fatal. Scientists,
including Auwerx and Olefsky, had anticipated that NCoR in specific adult cells
would have broader effects than it does.
What these findings suggest is
that limiting the levels or activity of NCoR could improve human metabolism for
the better. It might be possible to produce drugs that specifically target NCoR
activity only in one tissue or another. Olefsky's work suggests that fat is the
prime target for improving insulin sensitivity since the mice with changes only
in adipose experience systemic improvements.
"There is no doubt where
this begins," Olefsky says, "and with this adipocyte [NCoR] knockout you get
systemic insulin sensitivity; the liver and muscle gets better too."
The
fact that NCoR deficiency comes with benefits in two totally different contexts
makes such a treatment strategy that much more compelling, Auwerx said. "At the
end of the day, it's doing something good for metabolism," Olefsky
said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Common way to pump up muscles and prevent diabetes
Common way to pump up muscles and prevent diabetes
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