Sunday, April 15, 2012

Fat gene may predict protection against diabetes, study suggests

While obesity is a huge risk factor for type 2 diabetes, many people with 50 or 60 extra pounds to lose never develop the condition, and a new study from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center provides a possible explanation. It may have something to do with how much they express a particular gene in their fat cells; the gene makes cells more sensitive to the hormone insulin which transports glucose into cells. Normally, type 2 diabetes occurs when cells become resistant to insulin, causing blood sugar levels to rise to dangerously high levels. In the study published Sunday in the journal Nature, the researchers manipulated the “glucose transporter” gene in obese mice to allow more sugar into fat cells and found that the mice didn’t develop diabetes. On the flip side, normal weight mice who lacked the glucose transporter gene had soaring blood sugar levels. “We all have this gene but how much it’s turned on and expressed in our fat cells seems to be predictive of how metabolically healthy we are,” explained study co-author Dr. Barbara Kahn, an endocrinologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Those with high levels of expression get more protection from diabetes, while those with low levels have less protection...

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