Wednesday, December 5, 2012

More Enzymes Create Less Obesity


According to the National Cancer Institute, 68% of adults are obese. This puts those adults in the risk of many diseases like diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and they have a higher chance of getting cancer. But recently, a team of international scientists have discovered that they can reverse obesity in mice. By manipulating a enzyme in the rodents body, tyrosine-protein kinase-2 or TyK2, they discovered that the enzyme regulates the obesity in the mice and also in humans by differentiating a fat tissue called brown adipose tissue. The scientists tested skin samples from humans and found that the TyK2 levels in samples from obese subjects were 50% less than in the samples from fit or average weight test subjects.

You have two different types of fat in you: white adipose tissue (WAT) and the brown adipose tissue (BAT). Until recently, scientists thought that BAT was only present in infants. Now they know that both, which are used as energy storages, are active in adults. The scientists gave the obese mice a protein called Stat3. This along with another protein called PRDM16 develops the BAT and decreases the person’s obesity.

Reversing obesity could really change the world. Obesity, as said earlier, can cause many health problems. This could help fight cancer and diabetes. Right now, the U.S.A. has the highest obesity rate in the world and the world’s average rate is 14.1%. If we showed obese people a new safe way to lose weight without all the sweat is here, we could fight the problem right here at home.

When I first saw this article, I thought that it was crazy. I believed that you can only become less fat by having a healthy diet and working out. I now know that there are other weight loss strategies and not just the ways the contestants lose weight on “The Biggest Loser”.

Through this article, I further increased my knowledge of how enzymes work in the body. I learned that enzymes do not just increase the speed of reaction times but also help regulate things like fat in your body.

All in all, this new breakthrough could change the world and make the Earth’s inhabitants healthier. This could also cause a decrease in cancer and diabetes. This group of scientists at Virginia Commonwealth University have really discovered something that could help mankind.

 The news article:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/12/121205132433.htm

Thursday, November 15, 2012

A Rain Forest In Your Belly Button?

pictures of bacteria growth from belly button lint
Belly button bacteria samples: Bacillus subtilis (left) and Staphylococcus epidermidis.
Images courtesy of Belly Button Diversity
 
 
 
 
Everyone has a belly button, but do you know what is in it? According to research, your belly button is similar to a “rain forest”. About two years ago, a group of scientists from North Carolina University study 60 belly buttons. The team found 2,368 species of bacteria, 1,458 of which are brand new to science. The strange thing was that, while some of the bacteria showed up multiple times on 6 different subjects, all the other species showed up in only a single subject. One subject’s belly button contained bacteria found only in soil from Japan, yet the subject had never been to the country. One subject even harbored bacteria known to thrive in ice caps and thermal vents. Eight species showed up on 70% of the subjects and it showed up in large numbers. Now scientists want to know why these bacteria show up.

Knowing that there are unknown bacteria is a little scary. I mean, scientists don’t know if the new bacteria are dangerous or helpful. It could help advances in the medical field though. Maybe one of these new bacteria species can fight and kill cancer cells. After reading the article, I am really intrigued by this find. My belly button could be the home to a new type of bacteria that could cure a disease or cause one. I think it would be a really cool thing to look at someone’s belly button under a microscope. You would get a chance to see bacteria alive and in abundance. All in all, there is a micro rain forest of bacteria in your belly button.
 
 
 
 Visit the news article: