THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Promoting a low carb high fat lifestyle for the safe control of diabetes. Eat whole fresh food, more drugs are not the answer.


Welcome to the Low Carb Diabetic forum,have you signed up yet? if not then sign up and join us in the low carb community today!

2 posters

    Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered

    yoly
    yoly
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Posts : 650
    Join date : 2014-08-14

    Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered Empty Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered

    Post by yoly Wed Jul 29 2015, 12:45

    (Many believe that diabetes is a mitochondria disease)

    Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered

    No. 35 | 28/07/2015 | by Koh

    Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have discovered an entirely new control mechanism that regulates the function of mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell. Surprisingly, a fatty acid is playing a key role in this process. The scientists have now reported in the journal Nature that using fatty acid as a food additive improved disease symptoms in flies that suffer from Parkinson’s-like symptoms due to dysfunctional mitochondria.

    Mitochondria are essential to all higher forms of life. Every animal and plant depends on these small intracellular structures. Mitochondria have multiple tasks: Since they generate most of the cell’s biochemical energy, they are referred to as the powerhouses of the cell. In addition, they are responsible for producing and breaking down amino acids and fats. They also regulate cellular death, called apoptosis.

    As a result, the spectrum of diseases that are linked to mitochondrial defects is wide, ranging from severe muscular and nervous disorders to neurodegenerative diseases as well as all symptoms of aging.

    “It was by pure chance that we discovered this completely new control mechanism of mitochondrial function,” says first author Deniz Senyilmaz, who works in Aurelio Teleman’s group at the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ). In collaboration with colleagues from Cambridge, Teleman and his team had planned to investigate the metabolism of long-chain fatty acids. For this purpose, the researchers bred flies whose cells were unable to produce stearic acid, a fatty acid that is composed of 18 carbon atoms. Animals with this defect did not develop beyond the pupal stage and were not viable afterwards.

    Teleman and his team were curious to find out why this happened. They then discovered a highly complex biological control mechanism that regulates the fusion – as well as fragmentation – of mitochondria and, hence, the performance of these organelles.

    The key element in this control mechanism is the transferrin receptor, which binds stearic acid. “For the first time in biological research, we have found out that stearic acid, which up until now has been believed to be simply a metabolic product, also has signaling function,” says Teleman. The researchers demonstrated that mitochondrial control via stearic acid works not only in flies but also in the HeLa human cancer cell line.

    When the researchers added stearic acid to fly food, the animals’ mitochondria fused; when they kept fatty acid levels low, the organelles fragmented. “If using stearic acid as a food additive improves the performance of normal mitochondria, then it might do the same in pathogenically dysfunctional mitochondria,” Teleman explained, describing their experimental approach.

    The researchers studied flies that exhibit Parkinson’s-like symptoms resulting from a mitochondrial defect in the PINK and Parkin proteins and are recognized as a model system for studying this neurodegenerative disease. When the affected animals were fed stearic acid with their food, their motor skills and energy balance improved and they survived for much longer.

    “This opens up the fascinating possibility of using a food additive to alleviate symptoms in patients with mitochondrial disease,” says Teleman. “However, this still is a dream of the future, because we do not yet know whether human cells respond in the same way as fly cells do to increased quantities of stearic acid in the diet. Our diet naturally contains much more stearic acid than fly food does. Therefore, a further increase might not make any more difference.”

    http://www.dkfz.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/2015/dkfz-pm-15-35-Fatty-acid-increases-performance-of-cellular-powerhouse.php
    Eddie
    Eddie
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Male Posts : 3807
    Join date : 2014-08-13
    Age : 74
    Location : London

    Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered Empty Re: Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered

    Post by Eddie Wed Jul 29 2015, 13:24

    Good grief Yoly I don't take most of the mouse studies very seriously, but flies. It won't be long before Phoenix at the flog is quoting this study to rubbish low carb high fat. Nature of the beast and all that. mrgreen
    yoly
    yoly
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Posts : 650
    Join date : 2014-08-14

    Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered Empty Re: Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered

    Post by yoly Wed Jul 29 2015, 16:05

    I doubt it since is in favor of fatty acids feeding and not for just flies but other animals and human cell line; "When the affected animals were fed stearic acid with their food, their motor skills and energy balance improved and they survived for much longer.

    Stearic acid is a saturated fatty acid with an 18-carbon chain.

    Sponsored content


    Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered Empty Re: Fatty acid increases performance of cellular powerhouse – Fundamentally new biological signaling pathway discovered

    Post by Sponsored content


      Current date/time is Fri Apr 26 2024, 19:52