Friday, June 14, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

How brown fat cells could help combat type 2 diabetes, obesity

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Nov, 2014 09:51 AM
    A newly identified signalling pathway that stimulates glucose uptake in brown fat cells might be useful for treating type 2 diabetes and obesity, says a new study.
     
    The pathway, which involves a protein kinase called mTOR, stimulates the transport of a glucose-importing protein called GLUT1 to the surface of brown fat cells.
     
    Researchers in Sweden showed that the mTORC2 signalling pathway is the key regulator of glucose uptake in brown fat tissue in mice.
     
    "One of the most interesting characteristics of this newly discovered signal pathway is that it differs from the signal pathway triggered by insulin," said Tore Bengtsson from the department of Molecular Biosciences at the Stockholm University in Sweden.
     
    "The signalling pathway in brown fat can most likely be activated even in patients with type 2 diabetes, where insulin signalling is impaired," added Bengtsson.
     
    When our body encounters cold temperatures, the nervous system activates adrenoceptors on the surface of brown fat cells to stimulate glucose uptake from the bloodstream.
     
    Brown fat cells then use this glucose as a fuel source to generate body heat.
     
    In addition to being an effective tool for controlling blood sugar levels in type 2 diabetes patients, stimulating the mTORC2 pathway to take advantage of the energy-burning power of brown fat might be effective as a weight loss therapy, suggested the findings.
     
    The study appeared in The Journal of Cell Biology.

    MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

    Long term shift work hampers memory

    Long term shift work hampers memory
    Long term shift work can help you earn more but it could adversely affect your brain functions, such as memory and processing speed, says a research....

    Long term shift work hampers memory

    Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart

    Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart
    Poor eating habits can affect your heart for a long time and the effects can persist long after dietary habits are improved, shows a research....

    Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart

    Kick the butt to avoid chronic back pain

    Kick the butt to avoid chronic back pain
    Smokers are three times more likely than non-smokers to develop chronic back pain, warns a research....

    Kick the butt to avoid chronic back pain

    Exercise reduces risk of breast cancer

    Exercise reduces risk of breast cancer
    Everybody is aware of the fact that exercise is good for your health, but very few know that it can help in preventing breast cancer too, says an expert....

    Exercise reduces risk of breast cancer

    Weight-loss surgery reduces diabetes risk

    Weight-loss surgery reduces diabetes risk
    Weight-loss surgery could reduce the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes by around 80 percent in obese people, says a study....

    Weight-loss surgery reduces diabetes risk

    Eating fish the right way

    Eating fish the right way
    Eating fish has been associated with lower rates of heart disease, stroke, depression and Alzheimer's disease. But how you eat it may be the real key....

    Eating fish the right way