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Gene may open new avenue for fighting fat.


Researchers have found a gene that turns up the furnace in the metabolism of mice. Understanding what controls the gene, they speculate, may lead to new ways to help obese people burn calories.

The scientists isolated the gene, PGC-1, from brown fat, a specialized heat-producing tissue present in many mammals. Brown fat is abundant in newborn mammals, and some animals, such as mice, retain their brown fat into adulthood.

The newly discovered gene activates adaptive thermogenesis--the process by which an animal burns stored fat to dissipate excess calories or stay warm. Heat production by brown fat warms newborn humans and helps hibernating mammals wake up (SN: 1/15/77, p. 42; 12/24/88, p. 424). This process is different from the body's more obvious generation of heat by shivering.

When cold, the body switches on adaptive thermogenesis thermogenesis /ther·mo·gen·e·sis/ (-jen´e-sis) the production of heat, especially within the animal body.thermogenet´icthermogen´ic

ther·mo·gen·e·sis
n.
 in brown fat and in skeletal muscle cells, but what controls the mechanism is poorly known, notes Bruce M. Spiegelman of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.  in Boston. He and his colleagues from Dana-Farber, Harvard, and the University of Chicago report their finding in the March 20 Cell.

"We've discovered a molecule that has all the properties to suggest that it's a key regulator of thermogenesis," he says.

The researchers identified PGC-1 by sorting through genes that are active in brown fat. They were seeking a gene that codes for a protein that binds to PPAR-gamma, a protein involved in fat metabolism (SN: 12/9/95, p. 390).

Since adaptive thermogenesis helps animals tolerate cold, the researchers hypothesized that whatever genes regulate the heat-generating process would become active when an animal was kept cold. When the researchers held mice at refrigerator temperatures for 3 hours, PGC-1 activity in the animals' brown fat tissues increased 30- to 50-fold. After 12 hours in the cold, PGC-1 activity in skeletal muscles Skeletal muscles
Muscles that move the skeleton. All of the muscles under voluntary control are skeletal muscles.

Mentioned in: Creatine Kinase Test
 increased also.

To test how PGC-1 influences adaptive thermogenesis, the researchers inserted a turned-on copy of the gene into white fat cells, which store excess calories. PGC-1 in white fat cells normally remains inactive. Because thermogenesis takes place in a cell's mitochondria, the researchers could gauge the effect of the added PGC-1 by looking for changes in those organelles. Mitochondria dissipate food calories as heat or convert them into the energy-storage molecule ATP ATP: see adenosine triphosphate.
ATP
 in full adenosine triphosphate

Organic compound, substrate in many enzyme-catalyzed reactions (see catalysis) in the cells of animals, plants, and microorganisms.
.

Compared to unaltered white fat cells, those containing the activated PGC-1 showed increased mitochondrial mitochondrial

pertaining to mitochondria.


mitochondrial RNAs
a unique set of tRNAs, mRNAs, rRNAs, transcribed from mitochondrial DNA by a mitochondrial-specific RNA polymerase, that account for about 4% of the total cell RNA that
 production of several key enzymes. The number of mitochondria also rose.

Spiegelman's team basically turned white fat into brown fat, says molecular biologist Ronald M. Evans Ronald M. Evans (born April 17, 1949, Los Angeles) is an American professor and biologist who works at Salk Institute for Biological Studies near San Diego, California. His research focus is on the function of nuclear hormone signaling and metabolism.  of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Howard Hughes Medical Institute, (HHMI), nonprofit medical research organization founded in 1953 by Howard Hughes and largly funded from proceeds of the 1984–85 sale of Hughes Aircraft. Headquartered in Chevy Chase, Md.  at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies The Salk Institute for Biological Studies is an independent, non-profit, scientific research laboratory located in La Jolla, California. It was founded in 1960 by Jonas Salk, M.D., the developer of the polio vaccine.  in La Jolla. Brown fat is rich in mitochondria.

Adaptive thermogenesis can also kick in when an animal overeats. "It's already been established that when animals are deficient in thermogenesis, they get fat," Spiegelman says. "When people talk about having a fast or slow metabolism, this is actually what they mean." Manipulating the component of metabolism that dissipates energy might be a way to combat obesity, he says.

"If you could understand the regulation of this gene, you might be able to trigger its expression and therefore increase thermogenesis even in white fat," says Evans. "This is really the discovery of a new road toward our understanding of fat cell biology."

Jean Himms-Hagen of the University of Ottawa
The University of Ottawa or Université d'Ottawa in French (also known as uOttawa or nicknamed U of O or Ottawa U) is a bilingual [1], research-intensive, non-denominational, international university in Ottawa, Ontario.
 says that recent work on thermogenesis is exciting because it might lead to ways of increasing the amount of brown fat in adult people. "Having a lot of brown fat would not make you fat. It would increase your capacity to oxidize oxidize /ox·i·dize/ (ok´si-diz) to cause to combine with oxygen or to remove hydrogen.

ox·i·dize
v.
1. To combine with oxygen; change into an oxide.

2.
 fat--it's an alternative to exercising."
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:PGC-1 activates adaptive thermogenesis
Author:Jensen, Mari N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Mar 28, 1998
Words:600
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