On button of our ‘healthy’ fat discovered

by time news

Not all fat in our body is bad. For example, brown adipose tissue burns sugar and fat into heat, which maintains our body temperature. Cold stimulates brown fat. But how exactly that works is still unknown. Researchers at the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) have now shown that stimulation of the beta-2 receptor activates brown fat. This research, funded by the Dutch Heart Foundation, may offer starting points for the treatment of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. This is reported by the LUMC.

“When we are cold, our brain sends a signal via nerves to brown adipose tissue,” says Professor of Endocrinology Patrick Rensen. “This signal activates brown fat cells, which in turn burn sugar and fat molecules from the blood. This not only releases CO2 that is exhaled, but also heat that warms our body.” Rensen and colleagues have now discovered which ‘button’ on the brown fat cells is turned on by the signal from the brain.

Activating brown fat as a treatment?

That is the beta-2 receptor, the researchers write in Cell Reports Medicine. “With this knowledge we can make new stimulators that activate brown fat. In theory, this approach can counteract type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease because activation of brown fat by cold not only reduces body fat, but also the amount of glucose and cholesterol in the blood,” says Rensen.

Research in humans

Rensen and colleagues previously showed that stimulation of the beta-3 receptor in mice activates brown fat, so that the mice not only lost body fat but also developed less arteriosclerosis. Human brown fat cells were found to have hardly any beta-3 receptor. Stimulation of the beta-2 receptor did appear to activate brown fat cells in the laboratory. Now the researchers have actually demonstrated this in humans.

“We administered salbutamol to 10 volunteers. This is a specific simulator of the beta-2 receptor. It was found to greatly increase the uptake of radiolabeled sugar by brown fat, unless the receptor was blocked. We have demonstrated this with PET-CT scans in collaboration with the Radiology department,” says Rensen.

By: National Care Guide

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