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Sunday, March 27, 2011

Fat or Fire, What Comes First? Scientists Answer: Obesity Alone Triggers Inflammatory Signaling in Mice

Posted by Unknown at 12:20 PM
The metabolic syndrome, i.e. the combination of obesity, inflammation and insulin resistance, is at the center of contemporary medical research. In my appearance on Carl Lenore's Super Human Radio, I already mentioned that from a logical perspective the mainstream belief, inflammation was the root of all evil, must be flawed. How should the reaction to a problem be the cause of the very problem itself? A recent study coming from a group of Korean scientists strengthens my conviction that out of the triad that not inflammation, but rather obesity or - one step further up in the genesis of the pathology - the combination of an unhealthy diet and a sedentary lifestyle is at the heart of the triad we now call the "metabolic syndrome".

Kim et al. investigated the pro-inflammatory signaling cascade in either diet-induced (DIO) or leptin gene deficient (ob/ob) obese mice and found that obesity alone ...
[...] up-regulated the expression of TLR1–9 and TLR11–13 in murine adipose tissues, a phenomenon linked with downstream nuclear factor κB [inflammatory protein linked to linked to cancer, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, septic shock, viral infection, and improper immune development], interferon regulatory factors, and STAT-1 activation, and up-regulated the expression of cytokines and chemokines via MyD88-dependent and MyD88-independent cascades [activate NF-κB].
Thus, obesity sets the scene for inflammation and inflammation in turn triggers a cascade of unfavorable metabolic and hormonal changes which in and out of themselves result in further weight gain...

Here, we have a self-enhancing pathologic circle, which - and this is probably an even more important result of the study - was especially "effective" in the group of diet-induced obese mice:
The magnitudes of the obesity-induced up-regulation of the TLR1, TLR4, TLR5, TLR8, TLR9 and TLR12 genes in the visceral adipose tissue were greater in the DIO mice than in the ob/ob mice. Similarly, the expression of the IFNα and IFNβ genes significantly increased in the adipose tissues of the DIO mice but did not change in the adipose tissues of the ob/ob mice.
So, its not in your genes, but in your hands, feet and mouth to ward off the plague of the 21st century: Exercise and eat healthy to get lean and/or stay lean and stave off inflammation and diabetes.

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