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Genetic Factor controls Health-Harming
Inflammation in Obese
Newswise, June 24, 2011–Researchers at Case
Western Reserve University School of
Medicine have discovered a genetic factor
that can regulate obesity-induced
inflammation that contributes to chronic
health problems.
If they learn to control levels of the
factor in defense cells called macrophages,
“We have a shot at a novel treatment for
obesity and its complications, such as
diabetes, heart disease and cancer,” said
Mukesh K. Jain, MD, Ellery Sedgwick Jr.
Chair, director of the Case Cardiovascular
Research Institute, professor of medicine at
Case Western Reserve University School of
Medicine and chief research officer of the
Harrington-McLaughlin Heart & Vascular
Institute at University Hospitals Case
Medical Center, and senior author of the new
study.
A description of the research, led by Drs.
Xudong Liao and Nikunj Sharma, research
associates at the School of Medicine, will
be published online in the Journal of
Clinical Investigation Monday, June 13.
Signals from the environment within tissues
determine whether Kruppel-like factor 4,
KLF4 for short, is turned off or on, which
in turn determines whether macrophages
become attackers or healers.
In the absence of KLF4, macrophages produce
and spew toxins – the stuff of inflammation
- that destroy invaders such as bacteria.
High levels of KLF4 turn macrophages into
anti-inflammatory cells that remove the
debris and secrete compounds that heal
tissues.
The process works well in lean people.
Fellow researchers in France found that the
macrophages residing in fatty tissues of
lean people contain high levels of KLF4.
But, when people eat high-fat foods and gain
weight, their body fat draws more and more
macrophages, the vast majority of which are
of the inflammatory type. These macrophages
contain low levels of KLF4 and are more
easily irritated by cytokines, which are
cell-signaling proteins, and fatty acids
released by fat cells. The macrophages
respond by producing a low level of
inflammation, Jain explained.
“A low level of inflammation over time is
deleterious,” he said. In people,
long-lasting inflammation is connected to
diabetes, increased risk of cardiovascular
disease, cancer and other chronic illnesses.
In experiments using mouse models, Jain’s
team found that when KLF4 was removed from
macrophages, they all assumed the
inflammatory state.
Furthermore, when the KLF4-deficient mice
were fed a high-fat diet for 10 weeks, they
gained 15 percent more weight than control
animals fed the same diet, and developed
severe diabetes as evidenced by glucose
tolerance tests.
The researchers are now designing
experiments to determine if they can prevent
or reverse the shift from anti-inflammatory
to inflammatory by increasing KLF4 levels in
macrophages as they are bombarded by
cytokines or fats.
If they can induce macrophages to remain
anti-inflammatory, Jain said, “Would you be
able to lose weight, would diabetes go away,
would inflammation go away?
“Possibly.”
###
About Case Western Reserve University School
of Medicine
Founded in 1843, Case Western Reserve
University School of Medicine is the largest
medical research institution in Ohio and is
among the nation’s top medical schools for
research funding from the National
Institutes of Health. The School of Medicine
is recognized throughout the international
medical community for outstanding
achievements in teaching. The School’s
innovative and pioneering Western Reserve2
curriculum interweaves four themes--research
and scholarship, clinical mastery,
leadership, and civic professionalism--to
prepare students for the practice of
evidence-based medicine in the rapidly
changing health care environment of the 21st
century. Nine Nobel Laureates have been
affiliated with the school of medicine.
Annually, the School of Medicine trains more
than 800 MD and MD/PhD students and ranks in
the top 25 among U.S. research-oriented
medical schools as designated by U.S. News &
World Report “Guide to Graduate Education.”
The School of Medicine’s primary affiliate
is University Hospitals Case Medical Center
and is additionally affiliated with
MetroHealth Medical Center, the Louis Stokes
Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, and the Cleveland Clinic,
with which it established the Cleveland
Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case
Western Reserve University in 2002. http://casemed.case.edu.
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