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Scientists Discover Baby Fat Cells In The Body

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U.S. researchers reported on Thursday that baby fat cells formed at or before birth live inside the blood vessels that nourish fat deposits and lay waiting to form new fat cells.

The findings could help researchers trying to find better ways to control the obesity and diabetes epidemics, and perhaps help people grow new fat deposits after surgery.

The team at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas reported that eating excess calories may activate the cells, which leave their hiding places inside the walls of the blood vessels.

Dr. Jonathan Graff, who led the study published in the journal Science, said the immature cells, called progenitor cells, appear to be formed at or before birth.

"These cells become fat cells. Being able to manipulate them or alter them offers an important potential for obesity and diabetes," Graff said.

He believes it may be possible to remove immature cells from a patient's own fat and use them to grow natural grafts, for example, for a woman after breast cancer surgery. Cosmetic purposes might include plumping out lips or wrinkles.

Graff said it's easily accessible. "It's chock-a-block full of these stem cells. It's the ideal source for reconstruction and such cells may be useful for the field of regenerative medicine.”

Stem cell researchers hope someday to be able to remove a patient's own cells, manipulate them as needed and use them as tissue grafts or transplants to cure disease or repair injuries.

Graff's team genetically engineered mice so that cells that produced a large amount of a fat-regulating hormone called PPAR-gamma would glow green.

His team searched in fat deposits, inside the blood vessel walls, where some experts had guessed fat cells may originate. Some green-glowing cells were in there and when taken out they matured into fat cells.

"They're not just attached to the vessel wall, they're an integral part of it," Graff said.

Graff said the cells can react to compounds in the blood, including nutrients like glucose. Perhaps they drift out of the vessel walls when they sense enough glucose, which in turn signals that the body is taking in more calories than it needs and should store some as fat.

The team then tested the cells' response to diabetes drugs known as thiazolidinediones.

Also called TZDs or glitazones, the drugs include GlaxoSmithKline Plc's Avandia, which has been linked to increased heart attack risk, and Takeda Pharmaceutical Co Ltd's pioglitazone, sold as Actos or Glustin.

Graff noted that the progenitor cells matured into fat cells when treated with glitazone drugs.

"One of the side-effects that people don't like is they gain 10 or 15 pounds on (these drugs)," Graff said.

However, this could help explain how the drugs fight type-2 diabetes, which occurs when the body loses its ability to use insulin to convert food to fuel.

Graff said fat cells produce signals that control blood sugar. “We don't know what those signals are."

"We know that skinnier fat cells send out good signals and fatter fat cells send out bad signals. TZDs alter them so that they are more insulin-sensitive."
TravG73

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