A New Class of Hormone from Healthy Fat Cells Benefits Body Metabolism, HSPH Researchers Find in Mice
Discovery of ‘lipokine' signaling could eventually lead to new treatments for obesity-related conditions
For immediate release: Thursday, September 18, 2008
Boston, MA -- Scientists at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) have identified in mice a newly discovered class of hormones -- lipokines, according to a report in the September 19, 2008, issue of Cell. Furthermore, they have implicated a lipokine as a molecule in mice that helps stop or even reverse obesity-related conditions such as insulin resistance and "fatty liver."
Adipocytes, or fat cells
Lipokines are hormones made from lipids, or fats. All other known hormones -- chemical signals secreted into the blood that regulate distant cells and organs -- are steroid- or protein-based.
Researchers, led by HSPH Professor Gökhan Hotamisligil, knew from
previous experiments that an unidentified factor in the fat tissue of
genetically engineered mice sent signals to regulate metabolism in
liver and muscle tissues. The researchers suspected that elucidating
the mechanism could be of significance.
"We initially thought the factor behind this mechanism would be a
protein or a peptide hormone, and we spent a great deal of time looking
for it in the wrong places," Hotamisligil said. "Then we discovered it
was something sitting right in front of us -- one of the thousands of
fatty acids that are released into the blood serum by fat cells."
To pinpoint the specific fatty acid, Haiming Cao, a research fellow in the Hotamisligil lab and first author of the Cell
paper, used a new technology platform called "lipomics" that enables
simultaneous identification of hundreds of lipids at a time. (The term
"lipomics" applies to the study of lipids in a similar way to how the
term "genomics" applies to the study of genes and "proteomics" to the
study of proteins). In collaboration with scientists Michelle Wiest and
Steven Watkins of Lipomics Technologies+, the research team
painstakingly mapped all of the lipids in the bloodstream and the fat,
muscle, and liver tissues of the mice suspected to have the mechanism.
After sifting through massive amounts of data, the scientists
discovered the "lipokine" in the fat cells of their genetically
engineered mice. The hormone, "C16:1n7-palmitoleate," travels to the
muscles and liver, where it improves cell sensitivity to insulin and
blocks fat accumulation in the liver. In addition, the researchers
observed that palmitoleate suppressed inflammation, which was
previously identified by Hotamisligil and others to be a primary factor
leading to metabolic disease.
The scientists also discovered that palmitoleate production is markedly
increased in genetically manipulated animals whose fat cells lacked
proteins that serve as ‘chaperones,' or molecular carriers, for the fat
absorbed from food that is deposited into fat storage cells. The lack
of these proteins caused a surge in palmitoleate signaling to the
muscles and the liver, where improved insulin function allowed cells to
absorb nutrients more efficiently. These mice were remarkably resistant
to the metabolic abnormalities that are normally associated with the
long-term consumption of a high-fat diet; they did not develop
diabetes, heart disease, or fatty liver.
Hotamisligil and Cao observed that these mice were unable to store much
dietary fat; and in response, the fat cells actually manufactured their
own fat, a process known as de novo lipogenesis. This self-made fat spurred the production of palmitoleate, leading to healthy regulation of whole-body metabolism.
"It turns out that, like most other things, the best fat is the
home-made variety, the one you make yourself," Hotamisligil said.
The scientists predicted that one effective way to utilize this
discovery for therapeutic or preventive purposes would be to stimulate
the production of endogenous palmitoleate by turning on the process of de novo
lipogenesis. "We believe that it might be possible to chemically
stimulate cells to manufacture their own 'good' fat, which could have
beneficial effects on metabolism through increased palmitoleate
signaling," said Hotamisligil.
The current global epidemic of obesity has spurred a sharp and
worrisome increase in metabolic disorders such as diabetes and
atherosclerosis, making them a leading cause of morbidity and
mortality. If the palmitoleate effect in mice is found to be similarly
important in humans, the effect may be tested as a potential treatment
for metabolic disorders, predicted Hotamisligil. He added that
palmitoleate may be found in natural products but doesn't presently
exist in a pure form.
Other authors of the paper are Hotamisligil lab members Kristin Gerhold
(now at the University of California in Berkeley), and Jared R. Mayers;
and Michelle Wiest and Steven Watkins of Lipomics Technologies in West
Sacramento, Calif.
Cao et al., Identification of a Lipokine, a Lipid Hormone Linking Adipose Tissue to Systemic Metabolism, Cell (2008), doi:10.1016/j.cell.2008.07.048.
This work was supported by a National Institutes of Health grant. Cao
is supported by an NIH Roadmap Fellowship and the American Diabetes
Association. Wiest and Watkins are employees of Lipomics Technologies.
Hotamisligil serves as a member of the scientific advisory board at
Lipomics Technologies.
A podcast by Cell describing the findings will be available.
+Tethys Bioscience, Inc., announced on September 17 that it has acquired Lipomics Technologies of West Sacramento, Calif.
For further information contact:
Christina Roache
617-432-6052
croache@hsph.harvard.edu
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