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Cancer drugs may also thwart obesity. (Fat Chance).


A promising class of anticancer-drug candidates, which work by depriving growing tumors of needed blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
, also prevent obesity or cause dramatic weight loss in rodents. This discovery rests upon the unappreciated fact that fat tissue, like a tumor, requires an increased blood supply to grow, says Maria A. Rupnick of Brigham and Women's Hospital Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) is a hospital in the Longwood Area of the Boston, Massachusetts neighborhood of Mission Hill. With Massachusetts General Hospital, it is one of the two founding members of Partners HealthCare.  in Boston, who led the study on the drugs.

"It's clearly a potential way to think about treating obesity," says Marc L. Reitman, director of obesity research at Merck Research Laboratories in Rahway, N.J. "I think the paper is very interesting, novel, and provocative."

Rupnick works with M. Judah Folkman Judah Folkman (b. 24 February 1933) is an American cellular scientist best known for his research on angiogenesis and vasculogenesis.

Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Folkman attended Ohio State University and then Harvard Medical School.
 of Children's Hospital A children's hospital is a hospital which offers its services exclusively to children. The number of children's hospitals proliferated in the 20th century, as pediatric medical and surgical specialties separated from internal medicine and adult surgical specialties.  in Boston, who originated the once-controversial idea that a growing tumor requires the creation of blood vessels in a process called angiogenesis angiogenesis /an·gio·gen·e·sis/ (-jen´e-sis) vasculogenesis; development of blood vessels either in the embryo or in the form of neovascularization or revascularization.

an·gi·o·gen·e·sis
n.
. The new study stemmed from Rupnick's desire to study angiogenesis in healthy adult tissues. The conventional view, however, was that because most adult tissues and organs maintain a stable size, adult animals rarely need new blood vessels except during specialized circumstances, such as wound healing wound healing Physiology The repair of a wound Steps Inflammation, repair and closure, remodeling, final healing; repair of incisions may be either simple–'clean' wounds with little loss of tissue heal by 'primary intention', or 'dirty' wounds heal by  and reproduction.

However, Rupnick had an epiphany several years ago while recalling her own decade-old work to isolate cells that form blood vessels in fat tissue.

"In that instant I realized, `Oh, my gosh, this is the best tissue we could possibly use to study blood vessel blood vessel
n.
An elastic tubular channel, such as an artery, a vein, a sinus, or a capillary, through which the blood circulates.


blood vessel(s),
n the network of muscular tubes that carry blood.
 growth in a non-cancerous system,'" she says. Fat "can grow and regress REGRESS. Returning; going back opposed to ingress. (q.v.)  very substantially, very rapidly, and repeatedly, even in an adult."

Rupnick subsequently confirmed that substantial blood vessel growth does occur in the fat tissue of mice that rapidly gain weight. And in the Aug. 6 Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, she, Folkman, and their colleagues report that some of the same angiogenesis inhibitors now being tested on cancer patients prevent excess weight gain in several different strains of obesity-prone mice.

The drugs did more then prevent new fat accumulation. They also triggered overweight mice to shed significant amounts of fat--up to half their body weight. "We were surprised by how much weight they lost," says Rupnick.

She speculates that the blood vessels in existing fat tissue remain in a more malleable state than most other mature blood vessels. This would facilitate rapid expansion or shrinkage of the surrounding fat tissue. Tumors harbor similarly malleable blood vessels, which are vulnerable to angiogenesis inhibitors; most vessels elsewhere are unaffected. Consequently, in mice that lose weight, the drugs probably destroy preexisting pre·ex·ist or pre-ex·ist  
v. pre·ex·ist·ed, pre·ex·ist·ing, pre·ex·ists

v.tr.
To exist before (something); precede: Dinosaurs preexisted humans.

v.intr.
 blood vessels, as they do in tumors, and lead to the death of fat cells, Rupnick says.

Other data suggest the drugs also alter the metabolism of the mice so that they burn more fat than other energy sources.

Rupnick and her colleagues have ruled out the possibility that angiogenesis inhibitors simply made the mice sick or spoiled their taste for food. "We've treated animals for over a quarter of their lifespan, and they're healthy and active," she says.

One remaining puzzle centers on a mouse strain that typically develops life-threatening obesity as a result of genetically induced, insatiable hunger. As expected, such mice gained little weight when treated with angiogenesis inhibitors. Surprisingly, however, the mutant mice also developed a normal appetite.

"I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 what's causing the change in appetite, and I think we should have a better understanding of that," says Rupnick. Answers to that question and others will be needed before angiogenesis inhibitors are tested against human obesity.

"Obesity drugs have to be incredibly safe," says Reitman. "Personally, I think you have to know the mechanism by which an anti-obesity drug Anti-obesity drugs include all pharmacological treatments intended to reduce or control weight. Because these drugs are intended to alter one of the fundamental processes of the human body, anti-obesity drugs are medically prescribed only in cases of morbid obesity, where weight  works in this current day and age."

Folkman points out that the demand for angiogenesis inhibitors in cancer trials has already overwhelmed the limited supply.
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Author:Travis, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Aug 3, 2002
Words:614
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