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Active RESEARCH GRANT UKRI Gateway to Research

Dissecting thermogenesis by brown adipose tissue and skeletal muscle in lean and obese subjects

£9.03M GBP

Funder Medical Research Council
Recipient Organization University of Edinburgh
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Mar 31, 2022
End Date Mar 30, 2026
Duration 1,460 days
Number of Grantees 5
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator; Award Holder
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID MR/W01937X/1
Grant Description

The number of people who are either overweight or obese continues to increase, and being obese increases your risk of developing many other diseases such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, certain cancers and reduces life expectancy. Obesity is also associated with a higher risk of dying from covid-19. As such, new treatments for obesity are urgently required to improve health.

Weight loss can be achieved either by reducing how much energy we eat or by increasing the amount of energy we burn. When people gain weight the amount of fat in your body increases, this is also called 'white fat' and this type of fat is there mainly to store excess energy. However, there is another type of fat in your body called brown fat, this is a very special type of fat in that its main role is to burn energy to keep us warm when we're in a cold environment.

Interestingly, people who are obese have less brown fat than people of normal weight, importantly though obese people who do have brown fat are less likely to develop diabetes and heart disease than obese people without brown fat. The amount of brown fat we have in our body can also be increased, as such there is much interest in working out how to activate brown fat as a new treatment to help reduce the chances of developing diabetes or heart disease.

However, our understanding of how brown fat generates heat is not well understood, in part this is because it is difficult to measure its activity in humans and relies on special types of scans. It is also unclear whether the brown fat in obese individuals doesn't function properly compared to the brown fat in lean people.

In this research we will measure how brown fat works in lean and obese people when they are placed in the warm and the cold. We will place special tubes in the brown fat, white fat and muscle tissue of lean and obese adults to measure how much sugar, fat and other substances these tissues use when generating heat. This will allow us to build a more complete picture of how brown fat uses these substances to produce heat.

We have previously shown that brown fat in humans produces a lot of a substance called lactate, we will also work out the importance of lactate to brown fat function and how brown fat uses this lactate to generate heat. Finally, we know that brown fat can communicate with other important tissues in the body to improve health, we will investigate how brown fat does this by measuring which substances brown fat produces in lean and obese adults.

This research will reveal how brown fat produces its beneficial effects on health and identify how obesity changes brown fat function. This may well identify new targets which will allow us to develop new treatments to make brown fat work better. This may in time lead to better therapies to help people lose weight, treat diabetes and prevent heart disease.

All Grantees

University of Edinburgh; Nhs Lothian; University of Birmingham

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