Dec. 5 - Waistline Growth on High-carb Diets Linked to Liver
Gene
Experts have been warning for years that foods
loaded with high-fructose corn syrup and other processed carbohydrates
are making us fatter. Now, a UW-Madison study has uncovered
the genetic basis for why this is so.
Writing in the December issue of Cell
Metabolism, a team led by biochemistry and nutritional
sciences professor James Ntambi reports that a gene in the liver,
called SCD-1, is what causes mice to gain weight on a diet laden
with carbohydrates. The gene encodes the enzyme SCD, whose job
is to synthesize fatty acids that are a major component of fat.
When the scientists fed a starch- and sugar-rich
diet to mice lacking SCD-1 in the liver, the extra carbohydrates
were broken down rather than being converted into fat and stored
— keeping the mice skinny. Meanwhile, control mice with
normal gene activity grew plump on the same food.
"It looks like the SCD gene in the liver
is responsible for causing weight gain in response to a high-carbohydrate
diet, because when we take away the gene's activity the animals
no longer gain the weight," says Ntambi. "These findings
are telling us that the liver is a key tissue in mediating weight
gain induced by excess carbohydrates."
The results could have implications for stemming
the skyrocketing obesity problem in people, Ntambi adds. He
explains that people pack on pounds in two ways, one of which
is to eat extra fat, which then accumulates in adipose, or fat,
tissue. But the main cause of weight gain is excess carbohydrates,
because they trigger the body to produce new fat.
Blocking SCD's action in the liver could therefore
offer another means to help people lose weight, Ntambi says,
especially since obese people appear to have higher levels of
the enzyme than do thin people.
"We think that obese individuals, in general,
may have higher SCD activity in both the liver and in adipose
tissue," he says. "So they may have a higher capability
of converting carbohydrate into fat."
High-carbohydrate diets have become exceedingly
common not only in western nations but also in the developing
world, as sugary ingredients such as high-fructose corn syrup
have crept into all sorts of processed foods, including soft
drinks, baked goods, condiments — even supposedly healthy
items such as low-fat, fruit yogurt. What Ntambi's team has
now demonstrated is how those diets can act directly on a gene
to boost fat synthesis and storage.
The current study builds on previous work, in
which Ntambi and his colleagues created mice that lacked SCD-1
everywhere in the body, including the liver, muscle, brain,
pancreas and adipose tissue. No matter how much they ate, the
mice didn't gain weight on either a high-fat or a high-carbohydrate
diet. "But it was very difficult to tell which tissue was
responsible for the effect," says Ntambi.
To tease this out, he and his colleagues subsequently
bred mice that lacked SCD-1 in the liver only and placed them
on either a high-fat diet or a high-carbohydrate, low-fat one.
Much to their surprise, the mice on the high-fat diet gained
weight just as quickly as normal, control mice.
"This suggests that in weight gain induced
by a high-fat diet, other tissues beyond the liver are involved,"
says Ntambi.
In contrast, the mice stayed thin when they
feasted on food heavy in starch and table sugar, or sucrose.
They were also protected from the condition known as fatty liver.
Ntambi thinks what's happening is that in the absence of SCD,
the liver has no way to convert surplus carbohydrates into fat,
causing the body to break them down instead.
The findings also highlight the central role
of the enzyme and its main product, a fatty acid known as oleic
acid, in overall carbohydrate metabolism, he adds. For example,
mice lacking SCD could no longer make glucose — the sugar
burned by cells for energy — leading to abnormally low
blood sugar levels, or hypoglycemia. They also weren't able
to make glycogen, a short-term storage form of glucose.
"It looks to us that if you don't have
enough oleic acid — which the SCD enzyme makes —
then the carbohydrate does not proceed through normal glucose
metabolism," says Ntambi. As further evidence of this,
when the scientists supplemented the mouse diets with oleic
acid, normal metabolism was restored.
In both mice and people, on the other hand,
eating lots of carbohydrate appears to boost SCD activity, leading
to a glut of oleic acid, increased fat storage — and,
over time, obesity.
"Too much carbohydrate is not good,"
says Ntambi. "That's basically what we are saying."
Source: University of Wisconsin-Madison
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