Archive for the Category »Fat Burning Fat Loss «

Protein that stimulates brown fat could boost weight loss strategies

For most of us fighting the battle of the bulge, fat is an enemy that must be reigned in to a healthier – and less noticeable – level. But there are actually two types of fat – or adipose tissue – found in mammals: white and brown. While white fat stores calories and is the culprit behind love handles, brown fat’s primary function is to generate heat to keep the body warm through the burning of fats in a process known as thermogenesis. Therefore, the ability to activate brown fat in the body could provide a means to fight obesity and keep the weight off. Now scientists have discovered a protein that could allow them to do just that.

We recently covered the discovery at the US San Francisco Diabetes Center that a protein called PRDM16 appears to regulate the development of brown fat and could be used to promote the conversion of white fat cells to brown fat. Now scientists at the University of Cambridge Metabolic Research Laboratories at the Institute of Metabolic Science have discovered that another protein, called BMP8B, also plays a role in the regulation of brown fat and is also a potential therapeutic target in the fight against obesity.

Unlike PRDM16, which accumulates in white fat cells until a high enough concentration is reached to flip a gene-controlled switch that triggers a conversion to brown fat, BMP8B plays a role in the regulation of brown fat by acting on a specific metabolic system that operates in the brain and the tissues of the body.

“Other proteins made by the body can enhance heat production in brown fat, such as thyroid hormone but often these proteins have important effects in other organs too,” said Dr Andrew Whittle. “Therefore they are not good targets for developing new weight loss treatments. However, BMP8B seems to be very specific for regulating the heat producing activity of brown fat, making it a more ideal mechanism for new therapies.”

In experiments carried out by the researchers, mice lacking the BMP8B protein found it more difficult to maintain their normal body temperature and also become more obese than normal mice – especially when fed a high fat diet.

The researchers found that treating brown fat cells with BMP8B caused them to respond more strongly to activation by the nervous system. Additionally, when BMP8B was administered to specific parts of the brains of the mice, the amount of nervous activation of brown fat tissue increased. As a result, the fat cells treated with BMP8B burned more fat and the mice whose brains were administered with BMP8B lost weight.

“A major feature of current weight-loss strategies is that people lose a lot of weight early on, but then reach a plateau despite continuing to follow the same diet regime,” said Professor Toni Vidal-Puig, lead author of the study. “This is because the human body is incredibly good at sensing a reduction in food consumption and slows the metabolic rate to compensate. A strategy to increase brown fat activity could potentially be used in conjunction with current weight loss strategies to help prevent the typical decrease in a person’s metabolic rate.”

Professor Vidal-Puig added that while the treatment made the mice lose weight by burning more fat in their brown adipose tissue, it didn’t cause the mice to simply eat more to fuel the increase in metabolism.

“There are obvious differences between mice and humans, and from a therapeutic perspective this work is preliminary,” Professor Vidal-Puig said. “Validation will be necessary to see if manipulating BMP8B would be safe and effective in humans.”

The team’s paper was recently published in the journal Cell.

Source: University of Cambridge


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Fat Gets To Your Gut Faster Than Previously Believed

Michael Harper for RedOrbit.com

You remember the old phrase “A moment on your lips, a lifetime on the hips?”

The saying quoted by doting mothers and grandmothers everywhere is usually the last thing we hear before shoving a piece of cake into our mouths, begging the food gods to silence the inner voices.

No one needs to be told that the fat we ingest turns into fat in our bodies. Going even further, it’s common knowledge that the fattier the food — and usually the more delicious the food — the worse it will eventually be for us. Despite this, those ever curious scientists couldn’t leave well enough alone and decided to give us even more reason to tentatively approach the dinner table.

In a story which could either be taken as good news or bad news, a new report suggests the fat we ingest from foods can wind up in our midsections within hours of eating.

Good news for those who thought they were going crazy as they loosened their belt after a meal, bad news for everyone else.

According to researchers at Oxford University, the equivalent of 2 to 3 teaspoons of whatever you are eating can end up on your waist much quicker than previously thought. Not to be outdone, your hips, thighs and rear-end will begin to plump up if you continue to overeat, just like your mother always said it would.

Fredrik Karpe and Keith Frayne conducted the study, and found the first fat from any meal arrives in the blood within one hour of ingestion.

After 3 to 4 hours, the researchers found most of the fat had been adopted by the adipose tissue near the waist, where most short-term fat ends up.

Karpe and Frayne’s paper has been published in the Physiological Reviews.

If you’re wondering why such a study was conducted, it turns out there may have been some method to their utter madness.

Thanks to their research, we now have a better understanding of the way fat works. The fact that overeating and eating fatty foods adds mass to your gut is clearly nothing new. What makes this study different is the speed at which this fat travels from your mouth to your blood to your waistline.

According to the Telegraph,  Karpe, a professor of metabolic medicine, says, “The process is very fast. The cells in the adipose tissue around the waist catch the fat droplets as the blood carries them and incorporates them into the cells for storage.”

“If you eat too much, you don’t get into this phase of starting to mobilize it. There will just be constant accumulation and you will start to put on weight.”

Not feeling guilty yet? The research also shows that fit people are better suited to get rid of this fat that their overweight counterparts. As it turns out, exercise helps keep the pounds off for a longer period of time, as the workout turns your body into a fat-burning machine.

So, while we may continue to try and utilize fancy pills and machines which promise maximum results with minimal effort, it seems the best approach for weight loss may be the tried and true method of eating less and exercising more. After all, if scientists say it’s true, then it must be true, right?


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Fat reaches waist just three hours after a big meal

The results, which may require the adaptation the clichéd adage “a moment on
the lips, a lifetime on the hips”, have resulted in a greater understanding
of how weight gain works.

Previously, many have believed the process is much more gradual with food
travelling from the gut into the blood, where is was used by muscles, with
any excess being stored as fat.

But the Oxford University research suggests the fat is instead moved quickly
around the body in the bloodstream before being “caught” and stored.

Karpe, professor of metabolic medicine, said: “The process is very fast. The
cells in the adipose tissue around the waist catch the fat droplets as the
blood carries them and incorporates them into the cells for storage.

“If you eat too much, you don’t get into this phase of starting to mobilise
it. There will just be constant accumulation and you will start to put on
weight.”

In a paper published in the Physiological Reviews, the scientists also
suggested fit people found it easier to get rid of unwanted fat, as exercise
gives a long-term boost to fat-burning mechanisms.

The results of the research come just days after British researchers advised
people should use their waist measurements to determine the risk of
suffering weight-related problems.

Dr Margaret Ashwell told the European Congress on Obesity in Lyon, France,
that keeping waist circumference to half one’s height would help increase
life expectancy.


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Protein highlights 'ideal mechanism' for new therapies to fight obesity — study


InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

LONDON — British scientists have identified a protein that could enhance the burning of fat, providing an “ideal mechanism” for development of new therapies to fight obesity.

Scientists at University of Cambridge reported in the latest issue of the journal Cell that the protein BMP8B acts on a specific metabolic system to regulate brown fat.

Fat tissues could be divided into white fat and brown fat. The former functions primarily to store up fat, and the latter burns fat to generate heat in a process known as thermogenesis.

Experiments showed that when mice lacked the protein BMP8B they found it more difficult to maintain their normal body temperature. They also became much more obese than normal mice.

In contrast, when BMP8B was administrated to the mice, their brown fat cells burned more fat and the mice lost weight.

“Other proteins made by the body can enhance heat production in brown fat, such as thyroid hormone but often these proteins have important effects in other organs too. Therefore they are not good targets for developing new weight loss treatments,” said the lead author Andrew Whittle at Cambridge.

“However, BMP8B seems to be very specific for regulating the heat production activity of brown fat, making it a more ideal mechanism for new therapies.”

One could be skeptical that techniques to increase metabolic rate might just be compensated by the body trying to make you want to eat more, to fuel this increased metabolism. But the researchers said their findings showed that treating mice with BMP8B did not have this effect. It simply made them lose weight by burning more fat in the brown adipose tissue.

 

The researchers noted that there are differences between mice and humans, and from a therapeutic perspective this work is preliminary. Validation will be necessary to see if manipulating BMP8B would be safe and effective in humans.

 


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New fat loss tools make staying trim a lot easier

Fargo, ND (WDAY TV) — People continue to opt for cosmetic procedures to stay trim without stepping in a gym, and as that demand grows, options for getting work done follows. Forget the knives, needles and suction hoses. Lazers and freezing machines are the way of the future of blasting the fat away.

“Since march 17th my body has completley changed.”

Amanda Tompkins started coming to Slim Ambition in March. Since then she has had 14 sessions with the I-Lipo machine.

Amanda: “It is targeting that area actually, that you physically want to work on and you see immediate results.”

After having three kids, she noticed she had problem areas that exercise alone couldn’t fix. Twenty minuets is all it took for this mom to drop inches.

Amanda: “I have done my legs, I have done underneath my arms you know, and basically it tightens, it gets rid of that subcutaneous fat, the giggly fat.”

So you may be wondering how this maybe too good to be true machine works, Slim Ambition General Manager Mark Deraney researched it fully and says it is 100 percent safe, requires No surgery…no down time, and no pain..

Mark Deraney/Slim Ambition, general manager: “What the machine actually does is it stimulates the fat cells so it penetrates the through the skin, they stimulate the fat cell and that actually creates the same chemical reaction that your body creates when you need enough energy for your body to get to fat storage.”

During the procedure 4 low level laser pads are placed on the target areas for 20 minuets. Deraney says the best results are seen after ten treatments.

Mark: “You should see anywhere from 3 to 6 inches in reduction, depending again on, you know your life style, you know are you doing the work out as aggressively as you should be, burning those 350 calories or so, are you making sure that you are watching your nutrition going forward, so that those fat cells don’t fill back up again.”

Although you do see fast results, each program requires commitment, you even have to exercise 30 to 45 minuets after each treatment.

Mark: “You have to come in multiple times, you have to do the exercise after the fact.”

Coolsculpting is the other growing array of treatments that will jump start your body’s ability to get rid of fat without going under the knife. The machine uses a targeted cooling process that kills the fat cells underneath the skin, literally freezing them to the point of elimination.

Veseda Hoff/Clinic Director: “It is able to get in there, grab onto that fat pad, freezes the fat, your body will then metabolize those dead fat cells gone.”

Only fat cells are frozen. Your healthy skin cells remain, it does not cause nerve or muscle damage.

Veseda: “It is just getting the surface fat to reduce that actual bulge right there, so it is not dangerous.”

Registered Nurse Veseda Hoff is the clinic director of Image Medi Spa in South Fargo. Hoff Says this fat loss procedure is for people who are within 20 to 30 pounds of their ideal weight.

Veseda: It is not for weight loss, you are not going to loose any weight with this, it is mainly for those fat pads that you just cant get rid of.

One CoolSculpting treatment takes one hour, and has minor side effects. Deb Olson has had two treatments, one on her stomach and one on her back. Some of the side effects she has experienced are bruising in the area treated and slight numbness for three to four weeks.

Deb Olson/Shape up client: “Initially you feel that vacuum pressure, the first ten minuets are kind of uncomfortable, but after that you kind of get used to it. Once they take the applicator off they massage it to break up those crystals.”

Olson says by looking at her before and after pictures and the way she now fits in her clothes, this sub zero procedure is well worth it.

Deb: “The results were awesome, like within five weeks I could tell the difference, in my belly, the way my clothes fit, it was unbelievable.”

These procedures are not covered by insurance, a Cool-sculpting treatment costs around 15-hundred dollars, and a package for 10 sessions of the I-Lipo is about 2-thousand dollars.

Tags:
danielle miller, city, news, health, updates


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Protein highlights "ideal mechanism" for new therapies to fight obesity : study

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London, May 13 : British scientists have identified a protein that could enhance the burning of fat, providing an “ideal mechanism” for development of new therapies to fight obesity.

Scientists at University of Cambridge reported in the latest issue of the journal Cell that the protein BMP8B acts on a specific metabolic system to regulate brown fat.

Fat tissues could be divided into white fat and brown fat. The former functions primarily to store up fat, and the latter burns fat to generate heat in a process known as thermogenesis.

Experiments showed that when mice lacked the protein BMP8B they found it more difficult to maintain their normal body temperature. They also became much more obese than normal mice.

In contrast, when BMP8B was administrated to the mice, their brown fat cells burned more fat and the mice lost weight.

“Other proteins made by the body can enhance heat production in brown fat, such as thyroid hormone but often these proteins have important effects in other organs too. Therefore they are not good targets for developing new weight loss treatments,” said the lead author Andrew Whittle at Cambridge.

“However, BMP8B seems to be very specific for regulating the heat production activity of brown fat, making it a more ideal mechanism for new therapies.”

One could be skeptical that techniques to increase metabolic rate might just be compensated by the body trying to make you want to eat more, to fuel this increased metabolism. But the researchers said their findings showed that treating mice with BMP8B did not have this effect. It simply made them lose weight by burning more fat in the brown adipose tissue.

The researchers noted that there are differences between mice and humans, and from a therapeutic perspective this work is preliminary. Validation will be necessary to see if manipulating BMP8B would be safe and effective in humans. (ANI)

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    Thermostat protein could help burn off the flab

    Turning the body’s brown fat into a furnace fuelled by unwanted flab might provide a new way to lose weight.

    The main role of brown fat is to burn just enough fuel to keep body temperature constant. This suggests that working out how the body controls the brown fat thermostat could lead to new drugs that order it to burn more energy than usual, gradually consuming stores of the unwanted white fat that leads to obesity.

    Recent research suggests the thermostat might be a protein called bone morphogenetic protein 8B, or bmp8B. Mice kept at a chilly 5 °C make about 140 times more bmp8B than mice at room temperature.

    Now, Andrew Whittle of the University of Cambridge and colleagues have confirmed the hunch, using mice unable to make the protein. These mice became obese even when fed a normal diet. They grew even larger when given a high-fat diet.

    Whittle’s team found that mice make bmp8B in a part of the brain called the ventromedial hypothalamus, and inside brown fat itself. The protein seems to work by increasing nerve signals to brown fat from the brain, and by making the fat cells more attentive to the signals so they burn more energy than normal.

    The researchers discovered that lab-grown brown fat cells could be made to burn more energy than usual by treating them with bmp8B. What’s more, mice given extra bmp8B through infusions into the brain lost weight.

    “It was priming the fat cells to be stimulated by the nervous system,” says Whittle.

    The research may ultimately lead to a “slow-burn” drug that very subtly steps up energy consumption by brown fat. Whittle says that the mice unable to make bmp8B only burned 2 joules of energy per minute less than normal mice, but this constant energy under-burn rapidly led to obesity. The aim of a drug would be to have an equal but opposite effect, tricking brown fat into burning slightly more than usual.

    Journal reference: Cell, DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2012.02.066




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    Protein that stimulates brown fat to burn calories identified

    Washington, May 11 (ANI): Scientists have identified a protein, which regulates the activation of brown fat in both the brain and the body’s tissues, suggesting an ‘ideal mechanism’ for development of new therapies to fight obesity.

    Unlike white fat, which functions primarily to store up fat, brown fat (also known as brown adipose tissue) burns fats to generate heat in a process known as thermogenesis.

    The research, which was conducted in mice and led by scientists at the University of Cambridge Metabolic Research Laboratories at the Institute of Metabolic Science, discovered that the protein BMP8B acts on a specific metabolic system (which operates in the brain and the tissues) to regulate brown fat, making it a potential therapeutic target.

    The scientists believe that activating brown fat could help to support current weight loss programmes, which individuals often struggle to maintain.

    “Other proteins made by the body can enhance heat production in brown fat, such as thyroid hormone but often these proteins have important effects in other organs too. Therefore they are not good targets for developing new weight loss treatments. However, BMP8B seems to be very specific for regulating the heat producing activity of brown fat, making it a more ideal mechanism for new therapies,” said Dr Andrew Whittle, one of the authors of the paper from the Institute of Metabolic Science.

    The experiments showed that when mice lacked the protein BMP8B they found it more difficult to maintain their normal body temperature. They also became much more obese than normal mice, particularly when fed a high-fat diet.

    Additionally, when the researchers treated brown fat cells with BMP8B they responded more strongly to activation by the nervous system. Furthermore, when BMP8B was administered to specific parts of the brain it increased the amount of nervous activation of brown adipose tissue. The result was that these BMP8B-treated brown fat cells burned more fat and mice given BMP8B in the brain lost weight.

    Professor Toni Vidal-Puig, lead author of the study from the Institute of Metabolic Science and a member of the MRC Centre for Obesity and Related Metabolic Diseases, explained: “A major feature of current weight-loss strategies is that people lose a lot of weight early on, but then reach a plateau despite continuing to follow the same diet regime. This is because the human body is incredibly good at sensing a reduction in food consumption and slows the metabolic rate to compensate.”

    “A strategy to increase brown fat activity could potentially be used in conjunction with current weight loss strategies to help prevent the typical decrease in a person’s metabolic rate.

    “One could be sceptical that techniques to increase metabolic rate might just be compensated by the body trying to make you want to eat more, to fuel this increased metabolism. But our findings showed that treating mice with Bmp8b did not have this effect, it simply made them lose weight by burning more fat in their brown adipose tissue.

    “There are obvious differences between mice and humans, and from a therapeutic perspective this work is preliminary. Validation will be necessary to see if manipulating BMP8B would be safe and effective in humans,” he added.

    The research has been just published in the journal Cell. (ANI)


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