Guest guest Posted March 29, 2008 Report Share Posted March 29, 2008 The Amazing Life of a Fat Cell The intriguing story of adipose tissue By John McIntosh; illustrations by David Cutler REMEDY Spring 2008 “My name is Adi: Adipose Tissue. I have been called many things in my life, from ‘inert tissue’ to ‘a chunk of useless slime.’ Most people look at me with disdain, but I’m really here to help them! I protect vital organs, store fuel and energy in case food gets scarce, make hormones work and control chemicals that regulate brain function, the immune system and metabolism. Without me, life would be impossible. But what thanks do I get? So often, I’m lipo’d out and thrown awayjust when there is so much good left for me to do.” Fast Fat Facts Fortunately, scientists are delving ever-deeper into the mysteries of fat cells and discovering more and more about the functions these expandable little lipid suitcases serveand why some good fat cells go bad. Adipose tissue is active and complex. It comes in a variety of sizes and types: small, medium, large, extra-large, predeveloped, young and old. Fat cells transmit signals to the brain; they also have receptors that get switched on and off. These receptors may tell the cell to store more fat, release more fat or trigger secretion of various chemicals that influence appetite and the body’s use of insulin. Fat cells are seriously opinionated: They even seem to have a gender preference when it comes to where they congregate and multiply. They are also always in the process of evolving and growing. “If you take a glob of fat and look at it under a microscope, you are going to see cells in various stages of maturity,” says Matthew Kaufman, M.D., a plastic and reconstructive surgeon who practices at the Institute for Advanced Reconstruction and the Plastic Surgery Center in New Jersey and Manhattan. Recent research shows, he notes, that a glob of fat contains not only adipocytes (mature, or adult, fat cells) but also preadipocytes (immature fat cells), and is a source of adult stem cells (precursor cells that have the potential to develop into various cells and tissues). This stew of not-yet, almost and full-blown fat cells may play an important role in determining many aspects of overall health, from body weight to insulin resistance, from sex hormones to emotional well-being. Our current understanding of the life stages of a fat cell is a far cry from the days when scientists believed that fat cells neither died nor reproduced. “We think preadipocytes may be used to replace old fat cells when they die out,” Dr. Kaufman says. “And the preadipocytes may come from stem cells in fat that are somehow prompted to emerge. “There is also evidence that fat is stimulated by certain chemicals in the body. One of these is insulin growth factor, or IGF. There is an intimate relationship between fat tissue in the body and insulin production.” Researchers have observed that as fatty tissue increases, insulin levels increase, perhaps with a corresponding elevation in IGF. Fat cells, Dr. Kaufman explains, are in turn stimulated by IGF; both insulin and IGF are likely to stimulate cell growth and inhibit cell death. In other words, you produce more fat cells, and they hang around longer. The ever-increasing number of fat cells also produces hormones called adipocytokines. These speed up cell growth and play a role in inflammatory processes. And that, Dr. Kaufman says, is the beginning of a cycle of weight gain and increasing difficulty in losing weight: “Individual fat cells expand, storing more lipids within their walls. This stimulates the maturation of preadipocytes into additional fat cells, and these mature fat cells get bigger, just like the ones before them.” A Fat Virus? Given all the concern about our growing national waistline and the epidemic of type 2 diabetes that threatens to swamp our health-care system over coming decades, it’s no surprise that researchers are trying to figure out just why Americans are so stubbornly fat and getting fatter all the time. Granted, we eat an enormous amount of fast food and watch far too much TV, but it doesn’t seem possible that those factors alone could account for all the excess weight we have put on. While we now have some knowledge of what happens in adipose tissue that makes fat cells fatter and more plentiful, we are just beginning to discover what sets off that process. In 2007, Magdalena Pasarica, M.D., Ph.D., principal researcher at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, LA, presented a paper at the International Applied Fat Technology Society meeting about her research on the human adenovirus 36 (AD-36) and its effect on the various fat cells found in fatty tissue. Adenoviruses, the common viruses that cause colds and flu, usually produce conjunctivitis, respiratory tract infections or diarrhea. “But when we infected chickens, rats, marmosets and mice with AD-36,” says Dr. Pasarica, “after three to six months, they all became obese, even though they consumed similar amounts of food as the control group did.” Dr. Pasarica’s group then studied the effect of AD-36 in animal preadipocyte cell lines and found that the virus caused these cells to accumulate fat. “Then,” she explains, “a study was done in humans. Researchers tested for the presence of AD-36 antibodies in the blood of 500 subjects from New York, Wisconsin and Florida; they were testing for people who had been infected with the virus at one point. What they found was that the people who were antibody positive were significantly heavier than the ones that were antibody negative.” The next step for Dr. Pasarica was to see what effect AD-36 had on adult stem cells found in fat. These stem cells, she notes, can become any type of cellbone cells, fat cells, muscle cells. It all depends on the induction that you use for them; as Dr. Pasarica puts it, “They are like blank cells.” After isolating the cells from liposuction aspirate, Dr. Pasarica’s team performed a Petri dish experiment that showed that once the stem cells extracted from fat were infected with the virus, they became fat cells. “The virus tells them to become fat cells,” she says. “You can extrapolate this to humans: Suppose that a human is infected with this virus. The virus could go to the adipose tissue and induce the development of new fat cells. Also, existing fat cells will be fatter after infection. “We’ve shown that AD-36 could act in three ways to make people become fatter and fatter,” conjectures Dr. Pasarica. “The virus makes existing fat cells bigger and fatter. It makes pre-fat cells turn into fat cells that in turn get fatter and fatter. And it influences stem cells in adipose tissue to turn into fat cells. It appears this is how we get more fat cells and fatter fat cells.” But the doctor knows that AD-36 is not the only cause of obesity in humans: “We are not claiming that all obesity is caused by this infection,” she stresses, “but we do believe that a certain percent might be caused by it.” This line of research may eventually help provide the answer to the age-old question: “Why, given two people with comparable diets and exercise routines, may one person become obese while the other person does not?” Clearly, we have yet to reveal all the mysteries surrounding the life of adipose tissue. But at least we now realize that it deserves our attention and respect. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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