Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Are Fatness Genes the Fitness Genes?

One of the most common notions of why obesity is so rampant today is because most of us carry in us the genetic ability to avidly take up calories when they are around and use them sparingly when they are not.

This notion has been called the “thrify genotype” and has been credited with allowing our ancestors to make it through the millenia of feasts and famines, while being blamed for the obesity epidemic today.

But does the genetic ability to become fat really bestow a survival advantage?

This question was addressed by David Pierce and colleagues from the University of Alberta in a paper just published in the International Journal of Obesity.

In this study, young genetically obese and lean-prone rats were exposed to a rigorous regimen of sparce food and ample exercise (wheel running).

Although the obese and lean-prone rats started out at the the same initial body weight, the obese-prone rats survived twice as long, and ran three times as far, as their lean-prone counterparts.

In addition, the obese-prone animals were able to maintain blood glucose and fat mass, whereas lean-prone rats quickly depleted these energy reserves. Judging by the corticosterone concentrations, the obese-prone rats appeared far less stressed by the survival challenge than their lean-prone counterparts.

This study clearly demonstrates that (at least in rats), carrying the genes for obesity confers a huge survival advantage during severe food restriction and strenuous exercise. In fact, even unders these “thrifty” conditions, the obesity prone animals were able to conserve their fat mass by being far more efficient (energetically) than their lean counterparts (same amount of work for fewer calories).

Thus, these findings not only support the hypothesis that an obese-prone genotype provides a substantial fitness advantage when the going gets tough but also shows why the same amount of dieting and exercising simply does not lead to the same amount of weight loss for everyone.

I guess it’s clear who the survivors of the next famine will be…

AMS
Edmonton, Alberta

VN:F [1.5.8_856]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.5.8_856]
Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)
  • Share/Bookmark

Leave a Comment

In The News

Not all body fat is created equal, experts say

May. 11, 2010 Metro Canada – “Belly fat is more biologically active than skin fat, meaning it doesn’t just sit there — it produces hormones and other chemicals that affect metabolism by increasing blood fat levels, promoting diabetes and high blood pressure,” says Dr. Arya Sharma, a doctor in Edmonton and scientific director for the Canadian Obesity Network. Read the article

» More news articles...

Publications

  • Subscribe via Email

    Enter your email address:


    Delivered by FeedBurner
  • http://www.wikio.com
  • I Twitter!


  • Disclaimer

    Postings on this blog represent the personal views of Dr. Arya M. Sharma. They are not representative of or endorsed by Alberta Health Services or the Weight Wise Program.
  • Member

    • Perspective
    • Confidentiality
    • Disclosure
    • Reliability
    • Courtesy

    medbloggercode.com


  • 2nd place best health blog


  • Locations of visitors to this page
    • Recent Posts

    • Archives

    • RSS Weighty Matters

    • RSS Dr Eye Candy

    • Click for related posts

    • Disclaimer

      Medical information and privacy
      Any medical discussion on this page is intended to be of a general nature only. This page is not designed to give specific medical advice. If you have a medical problem you should consult your own physician for advice specific to your own situation.


    • Meta

    • Obesity Links

    • Health Blogs
      • Average blog rating:

        9.3


      • Home | KOL | Media | Research | Publications | Trainees | Patients
        Copyright 2008 Dr. Arya Sharma, All rights reserved.
        Blog Widget by LinkWithin