Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Health

'Good fat' could help manage diabetes

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Nov, 2014 11:11 AM
  • 'Good fat' could help manage diabetes
Brown fat, nicknamed the ‘good fat’ because it warms up the body in cold temperatures, burning up calories in the process, could also be used to manage Type 2 diabetes, finds research.
 
Brown fat absorbs excess sugar in the blood and therefore if brown fat cells can be activated, blood glucose levels could be controlled without the need for daily insulin injections, a researcher pointed out.
 
Located on the back, the upper half of the spine and the shoulders, younger people are more likely to have brown fat than people who are overweight or obese or diabetic.
 
“In theory if we can find out how to stimulate brown fat into action, we could use it, not only to manage obesity, but type 2 diabetes too,” said lead researcher Masaaki Sato from the Monash University in Australia.
 
“Brown fat was discovered in adults a few years ago and now research is taking place world-wide to understand why some adults have it and others don’t,” Sato added.
 
By observing cells, the team found that following application of a drug that mimics cold exposure, brown fat produces large amounts of a protein that transports glucose into cells, and importantly does so independently of the way insulin transports glucose into these cells.
 
Closer analysis showed brown fat cells produced 10 times the amount of glucose transporters than insulin.
 
Potentially the research could lead to a completely new medicine to treat Type 2 diabetes, offering an alternative to daily insulin injections.
 
The study appeared in The Journal of Cell Biology.

MORE Health ARTICLES

'Revolutionary' antibiotics to tackle TB

'Revolutionary' antibiotics to tackle TB
Why mycobacteria - a family that includes the microbe that causes tuberculosis (TB) - survive oxygen limitation has long been a mystery but not any more....

'Revolutionary' antibiotics to tackle TB

'Simulated' human heart created for better drug testing

'Simulated' human heart created for better drug testing
In pioneering research, a scientist has developed a 'simulated' human heart to test the effect of drugs on the heart without using human or animal trials....

'Simulated' human heart created for better drug testing

Avian influenza treatments identified

Avian influenza treatments identified
In a novel discovery, scientists have identified six potential therapeutics to treat the deadly H7N9 avian influenza...

Avian influenza treatments identified

Genes play key role in twins' language deficit

Genes play key role in twins' language deficit
Contrary to the popular tendency to attribute delays in early language acquisition of twins to mothers, researchers have found that genes play a significant role in...

Genes play key role in twins' language deficit

Scaling up HIV therapy can end this epidemic by 2030: UNAIDS

Scaling up HIV therapy can end this epidemic by 2030: UNAIDS
The opening session of the 20th International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2014) began here Sunday with tributes being paid to the six delegates who...

Scaling up HIV therapy can end this epidemic by 2030: UNAIDS

Gene behind benign breast tumours identified

Gene behind benign breast tumours identified
Researchers have identified a critical gene that could help clinicians distinguish fibroadenomas cases from breast cancer. Fibroadenomas is the most...

Gene behind benign breast tumours identified