Health news
Health news top Health news

   Login  |  Register    
Health News Make AMN Your Home PageDiscussion BoardsAdvanced Search ToolMedical RSS/XML News FeedHealth news

Research Shows Insulin Helps Regulate Fat, Too

 
The Basics

NEW YORK - (Reuters Health) - Scientists in Massachusetts have discovered that the sugar-regulating hormone insulin plays a crucial role in moving fatty acids from the blood to fat-storage cells after a meal.

Although the research was conducted on the cellular level, eventually it may lead to a better understanding of how fat is metabolized in the body, the study's lead author told Reuters Health.

After a meal, levels of both sugar, or glucose, and fatty acids rise in the blood. Scientists knew already that insulin reduces glucose in the blood in two ways. First, the hormone signals the liver to slow its production of glucose. Second, insulin increases the uptake of sugar into tissues by causing glucose transporters within each cell to move to the surface where they draw sugar into the cell.

How the body lowers levels of fatty acids in the blood has been uncertain, however.

Now Dr. Harvey F. Lodish and colleagues at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge report that insulin is also involved in regulating levels of fatty acids in the blood. A report on the findings appears in the April issue of the journal Developmental Cell.

``Insulin causes cells to take up fatty acids from the blood,'' Lodish said in an interview. ``It does so by a fundamentally similar mechanism'' to how it handles sugar, he explained.

When the researchers added insulin to cells called adipocytes--which store most of the body's fat--fatty acid transporters moved to the surface of the cells from other parts of the cells. These transporters, FATP1 and FATP4, seem to promote the uptake of fatty acids into cells, because as the transporters congregated at the cell membrane, levels of fatty acids in the blood dropped.

Now that researchers understand how fatty acid transporters affect the uptake of fat on the cellular level, the next step, according to Lodish, is to measure the impact the transporters have on overall levels of fat in the body.

Genetically altering mice to have more or fewer fatty acid transporters may reveal the role these transporters have in the metabolism of fat by the whole body, he said. Such research could also lead to a better understanding of diseases that affect metabolism, including type 2 diabetes, Lodish and his colleagues note in their report.

[Reuters Health]

Last Revised at December 4, 2007 by Harutyun Medina, M.D.
RELATED STORIES:
Patients await diabetes strategy

Doctors warn of diabetes

Virus link to childhood diabetes

Diabetes doctor shortage revealed

Women With Diabetes - A Dozen Tips

Statins cut diabetes deaths

Cure for diabetes comes step closer

US researchers claim gene therapy could cure diabetes

Patients await diabetes strategy

Doctors warn of diabetes

Virus link to childhood diabetes

Diabetes doctor shortage revealed

Women With Diabetes - A Dozen Tips

Alcohol may prevent diabetes

Celiac disease common in type 1 diabetic children

Many Impotent Men May Have Unrecognized Diabetes

Research Shows Insulin Helps Regulate Fat, Too


   [advanced search]   
What health info have you recently searched for online?
Disease or condition
Exercise or fitness
Diet, nutrition or vitamins
None of the above


Get free support - Headache Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Treatment on HeadacheCare.net


Diabetes Mellitus
      Diabetes Mellitus

  Diabetes mellitus

  Essentials of diagnosis

  Epidemiologic Considerations

  Classification & Pathogenesis

  Clinical Findings

  Differential Diagnosis

  Clinical Trials in Diabetes

  Treatment Regimens

  Pre-Diabetes

  Steps of Management

  Patient Education

  Diabetes Mellitus Treatment

  Complications

  Diabetes Prognosis

  Diabetes and Infections

  Diabetes
  Chronic Complications


  Ocular complications

  Diabetic Nephropathy

  Diabetic Neuropathy

  Cardiovascular complications

  Skin and Mucous membrane
  complications


  Diabetic Coma

  Diabetic Ketoacidosis

  Hyperglycemic
  Hyperosmolar state


  Lactic Acidosis

  Hypoglycemia

  Introduction

  Clinical Manifestations

  Causes

  Diagnosis

  Treatment

  Hypoglycemia of Infancy
  and Childhood


  Glucose Requirements of
  Infants and Children


  Hypoglycemia due to
  Pancreatic B cell tumors


  Persistent Islet Hyperplasia

  Hypoglycemia due to
  Extrapancreatic Tumors


  Postprandial Hypoglycemia

  Alcohol-Related Hypoglycemia

  Factitious Hypoglycemia

  Immunopathologic
  Hypoglycemia


  Drug-Induced Hypoglycemia

  Diabetes & Oral Health

  Introduction

  Epidemiology and classification

  Diabetes Pathophysiology

  Diabetes Complications

  Diabetes Management

  Oral Diseases & Diabetes

  Periodontal Health & Diabetes

  Dental Management

  Diabetic Emergencies

  Treatment of Diabetes -
  Geriatric Medicine


  Epidemiology & Risk Factors

  Pathogenesis of Diabetes
  Mellitus in the Elderly


  Diagnosis & Differential
  Diagnosis of Diabetes


  Glucose Control

  Treatment and Management
  of Diabetes Mellitus


  Prevention of Clinical Diabetes

» » »

Health Centers





Diabetes









Health news
  


Health Encyclopedia

Diseases & Conditions

Drugs & Medications

Health Tools

Health Tools



   Health newsletter

  





   Medical Links



   RSS/XML News Feed



   Feedback






Add to Google Reader or Homepage
Diabetes Mellitus News, Headlines and Latest Stories on health.am
Add to My AOL





UrologyToday.net