高清福利片

高清福利片_

Belly fat resistant to every-other-day fasting: study

3 March 2021
Studies in mice show fat location matters for intermittent fasting
Scientists have mapped out what happens to fat deposits during intermittent fasting (every second day), with an unexpected discovery that some types of fat are more resistant to weight loss in mice.

In a mouse study, Australian researchers have mapped out what happens behind the scenes in fat tissue during intermittent fasting, showing that it triggers a cascade of dramatic changes, depending on the type of fat deposits and where they are located around the body.

Using state-of-the-art instruments, University of Sydney researchers discovered that fat around the stomach, which can accumulate into a 鈥榩rotruding tummy鈥 in humans, was found to go into 鈥榩reservation mode鈥, adapting over time and becoming more resistant to weight loss.

The findings are published today in .

A research team led by examined fat tissue types from different locations to understand their role during every-other-day fasting, where no food was consumed on alternate days.

The fat types where changes were found included visceral 鈥渂elly鈥 fat, which is fat tissue surrounding our organs including the stomach, and subcutaneous fat, which lies just under the skin and is associated with better metabolic health.

鈥淲hile most people would think that all fat tissue is the same, in fact, the location makes a big difference,鈥 said senior author Dr Larance from the and at the University of Sydney.

鈥淥ur data show both visceral and subcutaneous fat undergo dramatic changes during intermittent fasting,鈥 said Dr Larance, who is also a Cancer Institute of NSW Future Research Fellow.

Dr Mark Larance at Sydney Mass Spectrometry. Photo: Stefanie Zingsheim

Why visceral fat can be resistant to weight loss

While most people would think that all fat tissue is the same, in fact, the location makes a big difference.
Dr Mark Larance

During fasting, fat tissue provides energy to the rest of the body by releasing fatty acid molecules.

However, the researchers found visceral fat became resistant to this release of fatty acids during fasting.

There were also signs that visceral and subcutaneous fat increased their ability to store energy as fat, likely to rapidly rebuild the fat store before the next fasting period.

Dr Larance said it was possible that a history of repeated fasting periods triggered a preservation signalling pathway in visceral fat.

鈥淭his suggests the visceral fat can adapt to repeated fasting bouts and protect its energy store,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his type of adaptation may be the reason why visceral fat can be resistant to weight loss after long periods of dieting.鈥

Dr Larance said using a mouse model was a useful analogue ahead of studies in humans.

鈥淢ouse physiology is similar to humans, but their metabolism is much faster, allowing us to observe changes more rapidly than in human trials, and examine tissues difficult to sample in humans,鈥 he said.

Future research in mice and humans could uncover the mechanisms by which this resistance occurs and also which types of diet and other interventions may be best at tackling belly fat.

Mapping out the inner workings of fat deposits

Before analysis, the robotic preparation of tiny amounts of protein.听

The research team examined more than 8500 proteins located in fat deposits, creating a catalogue of changes that occurred during intermittent fasting, using a technique called proteomics.

Proteomics 鈥 the study of all proteins 鈥 a relatively new area of study that takes its name from genomics (the study of all genes), monitors how proteins react under certain conditions, which in this case is intermittent fasting.

The results provide a rich source of data that helps to paint a more complete picture of the inner workings of fat tissue.听

It was via proteomics that the research team were alerted of major cellular changes caused by intermittent fasting and, after further analysis, highlighted the visceral fat鈥檚 preservation mechanism in action.

The mass spectrometer, a machine at the heart of proteomics, in the midst of analysing the sample. The image is a thermal photo of the front of the instrument that reaches 300oC during analysis.

The study was conducted using the instruments of the in the Charles Perkins Centre, part of the University of Sydney鈥檚听.

Dr Larance says it should be noted that findings from the intermittent study may not apply to different diet regimes such as the 5:2 diet (fasting 2 days out of 7) or calorie restriction, which is common in people wanting to lose weight.

The results lay the foundation for future studies, which will dissect the molecules responsible for why visceral fat is resistant to energy release during fasting, and help determine what diet plans would be most beneficial for metabolic health.

鈥淭his sort of research has been enabled by these new instruments that allow us to 鈥榣ook beyond the streetlight鈥 鈥 it鈥檚 hypothesis generating; we knew we would find something but we didn鈥檛 know what,鈥 Dr Larance explained.

鈥淣ow that we鈥檝e shown 鈥榖elly fat鈥 in mice is resistant to this diet, the big question will be to answer why, and how do we best tackle it?鈥


Declaration:听 The study was carried out with the approval of the University of Sydney Animal Ethics committee, following the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia and ARRIVE guidelines. The authors declare no competing interests.

Ivy Shih

Media and Public Relations Adviser (Medicine and Health)

Related articles