Mouse Study Yields Obesity Drug Target
Posted on: Thursday, 7 June 2007, 12:00 CDT
U.S. medical scientists conducting a study of mice survival have discovered a molecular target for drugs to treat human obesity and other metabolic disorders.
Professor Steven Kliewer and colleagues at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center investigated a specific hormone that enables starving mice to alter their metabolism to conserve energy.
The starvation-fighting effects of the hormone, called fibroblast growth factor 21, was triggered in starving mice by a specific cellular receptor that controls the use of fat as energy. That results in a metabolic shift to burning stored fats instead of carbohydrates and inducing a hibernation-like state of decreased body temperature and physical activity -- all geared to promote survival.
This hormone changes the metabolism and behavior of mice in the face of inadequate nutrition, said Kliewer, the study's senior author. We hope to manipulate this hormone-receptor signaling pathway to craft the next generation of drugs to combat human obesity and other conditions.
The research is described online in the journal Cell Metabolism.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- New Study Shows Probiotics Linked to Metabolism
- Nicotine metabolizes faster in women than in men
- Experts Say Bioidentical Hormone Therapy Can Treat Hormonal Imbalances Including PMS and Perimenopause
- Light-induced hormone surge points to benefits of light therapy
- Life-extending Protein Keeps Blood Sugar in Check
- Genetic Determinants of Energy Expenditure and Insulin Resistance in Diet-Induced Obesity in Mice
- The High-Fat Diet-Fed Mouse: A Model for Studying Mechanisms and Treatment of Impaired Glucose Tolerance and Type 2 Diabetes
- The Incretin Approach for Diabetes Treatment: Modulation of Islet Hormone Release By GLP-1 Agonism
- Evaluation of Sex Hormone Levels and Some Metabolic Factors in Men With Coronary Atherosclerosis
- Could a Spice Treat Cystic Fibrosis?
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds