Weight Loss
A drug approved to treat overactive bladder may boost brown fat's metabolic capabilities, making it a promising candidate for weight loss. Brown fat burns energy to generate heat, which can help maintain body weight and prevent obesity. |
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Researchers have discovered that a drug FDA-approved to treat overactive bladder may boost brown fat's metabolic powers, making it a promising candidate weight loss treatment. Unlike energy-storing white fat, brown fat burns energy to generate heat, which can help maintain body weight and prevent obesity in rodents.
Brown fat makes up about 5% of the fat in newborn infants, and is thought to be a critical mechanism for thermal regulation in babys. In adults it is found in the upper chest and neck in small amounts typically. Brown fat has recently been found to be part of the skeletal muscle system, and is stimulated by cold exposure.
"Brown adipose tissue, or brown fat, produces β3-adrenergic receptor at levels higher than nearly every other organ in the body. We showed that a one-time dose of the drug mirabegron stimulates human brown adipose tissue so that it consumes glucose and burns calories." |
In all 12 men enrolled in the study, 200 milligrams of mirabegron led to higher brown fat metabolic activity, and at its peak level in the blood it increased the men's resting metabolic rate by 203 calories per day. While the dose was higher than the 50 milligram dose approved for overactive bladder, the treatment was well tolerated. All of the study participants were young, healthy individuals who had not previously taken mirabegron.
The study was published recently in the journal Cell Metabolism.
"Brown adipose tissue, or brown fat, produces β3-adrenergic receptor at levels higher than nearly every other organ in the body. We showed that a one-time dose of the drug mirabegron stimulates human brown adipose tissue so that it consumes glucose and burns calories," said lead author Dr. Aaron Cypess, who conducted the work at Joslin Diabetes Center and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, affiliates of Harvard Medical School, and is now at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health.
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Cold showers are now touted as a way to stimulate brown fat, but further research may find ways to prolong the effects on brown fat.
Dr. Cypess noted that in addition to attempts to activate brown fat, strategies that produce more of it might also help treat people with metabolic conditions. Other research groups are also generating promising results through the use of drugs to convert white fat cells into brown fat and through discoveries of the pathways and hormones that control brown fat metabolism.
SOURCE Cell Press via EurekAlert
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