Researchers at Oregon Health & Science
University have revealed that the
cortisol/obesity connection, touted by
many weight-loss supplement marketers,
may be even more tenuous than first
thought. The research also highlights
the complexities of the body's weight
regulation system and is published in
the current edition of The Journal of
Clinical Investigation.
"We've all
seen television ads for cortisol-reducing
weight loss drugs," said
Malcolm Low,
M.D.,
Ph.D.,
a senior scientist and associate
director in the OHSU Center for the
Study of Weight Regulation and
Associated Disorders. Low is also a
professor of behavioral neuroscience in
the OHSU School of Medicine, and a
scientist in the Vollum Institute.
"However, this research helps show that
cortisol levels are not the sole, major
factor involved in obesity and fat
distribution. In reality, there are many
other hormones involved in weight
regulation and it's hard to say whether
cortisol and corticosterone - both in a
family of hormones called
glucocorticoids - rise prior to weight
gain or if their increases are impacts
of the weight gain itself."
To conduct the research, scientists
studied specially bred mice lacking the
proopiomelanocortin (POMC) gene.
Previous research has shown that
mutations to the POMC gene in humans and
mice cause obesity, but simultaneously
decrease glucocorticoid levels. Because
it was unknown whether the primary
abnormality occurs in the brain or
peripheral tissues, scientists attempted
to repair the problem and counteract the
obesity by manipulating POMC and
glucocorticoid levels. The scientists
did this using two methods. One method
was to genetically restore POMC
selectively in the pituitary, a gland at
the base of the brain that regulates the
secretion of cortisol from the adrenal
glands, but not in the central portions
of the brain. The second method was to
directly replace glucocorticoids in POMC-lacking
mice through their drinking water.
"In both cases, the mice lacking POMC
in the brain did not show improvement in
their metabolic state. The treatments
actually led to an acceleration in
weight gain and development of
diabetes," explained Low. "Importantly,
the identical treatments had no
discernable effect in control mice with
normal POMC levels in the brain. This
research demonstrates the important
function of the POMC gene in the central
nervous system, independent of the
pituitary and adrenal glands. It also
demonstrates that cortisol alone is not
the major culprit in weight gain.
Glucocorticoids are merely part of a
chain of hormonal and neuronal signals
associated with obesity."
This research is being announced as the
OHSU Center for the Study of Weight
Regulation and Associated Disorders is
moving into its permanent, new home: the
state-of-the-art Biomedical Research
Building on the OHSU Marquam Hill
Campus. The new labs will allow basic
researchers and physicians to work side
by side in understanding the causes and
in developing treatments and
preventative measures for both obesity
and cachexia and their secondary medical
consequences.
Source:- Oregon Health & Science
University