www.expressindia.com - Weather | Horoscope | Stocks | RSS
expressindia web city
HomeBlogsCricketAstrology TendersClassifieds Reader Comments Hotels
Sign In / Register | Archive
Expressindia » Story

Why some people are healthy despite being fat

Font Size

ANI

Posted: Jan 30, 2009 at 1225 hrs IST

Washington Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Centre have identified a protein that may help explain why some people are healthy despite being obese.

In the study, they found that fat but healthy mice lacked a protein called collagen VI, which normally surrounds fat cells and limits how large they can grow, like a cage around a water balloon.

They found that mice whose fat cells were allowed to grow larger than fat cells in normal mice developed ''healthy'' obesity when fed a high-fat diet.

"The mice lacking collagen VI fared much better metabolically than their counterparts that retained this particular collagen," said Dr Philipp Scherer, director of the Touchstone Center for Diabetes Research at UT Southwestern and the study’s senior author.

"The mice without collagen VI don’t develop inflammation or insulin resistance. They still get obese, but it’s a ''healthy'' obesity," he added.

When people take in more calories than needed, excess calories are stored in adipose or fatty tissue.

The fat cells are embedded in and secrete substances into an extracellular matrix, a type of connective tissue that provides support to fat tissue, like scaffolding.

Collagen VI is one component of the extracellular matrix. Too much of this connective tissue prevents individual cells from expanding and can lead to fibrosis and eventually inflammation.

Dr Scherer said that inflammation is thought to be an underlying cause of metabolic disorders in humans.

He said that large fat cells are often considered a bad omen because they typically lead to increased cell death and systemic insulin resistance.

Under normal circumstances, fat cells continue to grow until they reach a point where the extracellular matrix they’ve built around themselves is so strong that it’s no longer flexible.

"In this particular case, however, the large fat cells are not as inflamed as they would normally be. Fat cells that lack collagen VI can grow to a huge size without becoming inflamed, suggesting that collagen VI directly affects the ability of fat cells to expand," Dr Scherer said.

According to Dr Scherer, the current finding is clinically relevant and probably will translate well from the mice to humans.

"Our study highlights the fact that collagen VI, and possibly other extracellular matrix constituents, are extremely important in modulating fat-cell physiology," he said.

The study appears online and in a future edition of Molecular and Cellular Biology.

Discuss this story on expressindia forums
Post Comments
Name* Email ID*
Subject* Country*
Message*
Characters remaining
 
TERMS OF USE: The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
I agree to the terms of use.

Latest News

Business

Showbiz

Sports

Now, plan for OBC quota in petrol pump allotment

NRHM scam: CBI probe reaches Sports Ministry centre

Public perception UPA-2 will crumble, says Pawar

Abandoned passports help Customs uncover human trafficking racket

Sub-quota remark part of pre-declared policy: Khurshid

Took outsiders as didn’t have good candidates: Digvijaya

In team Anna Pamphlet, 'central govt's fraud'

More
© 2011 The Indian Express Limited. All rights reserved
Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Express Group | Site Map