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Micro-RNA in Obesity -Related Metabolic Abnormalities

by Kathy Jones on Sep 23 2012 7:48 PM

 Micro-RNA in Obesity -Related Metabolic Abnormalities
A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals that people who suffer from obesity-associated metabolic abnormalities, such as type II diabetes and fatty liver disease, have higher levels of a micro-RNA which can be blocked to reverse some of the pathology caused by its actions.
MiR-34a (pronounced MEER-34a), a micro-RNA, occurs at higher than normal levels in the livers of obese animals and in human patients with fatty liver disease. In the new study, researchers discovered that miR-34a gums up production of a protein receptor, called beta-Klotho, needed for metabolic signaling in the liver. This hinders normal glucose uptake, glycogen and protein synthesis and other metabolic activities.

In response to signals from the small intestine, beta-Klotho contributes to normal liver function after a meal, said University of Illinois molecular and integrative physiology professor Jongsook Kim Kemper, who led the study. But in obesity, levels of miR-34a surge much higher than normal, resulting in abnormally low levels of beta-Klotho.

"The downstream effect is more glucose in the blood, more fat in the liver," she said.

The effects are dramatic. Slices of liver tissue from obese mice are laden with fat, whereas normal mice have minimal amounts of fat in their livers.

The researchers used a complementary strand of RNA (called antisense RNA) to neutralize miR-34a in obese mice. This therapeutic approach improved "metabolic outcomes, including decreased liver fat and improved glucose level in the blood," Kemper said.



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Source-Eurekalert


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