Mutated DNA may explain some obesity
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Marisa O’Neil
Any woman who’s ever blamed her mother for her own ample hips may
take heart in a new study. But they’ll likely have to look further
back than their own mother.
A team of researchers at UC Irvine published a report in the Jan.
9 issue of “Science” linking obesity and some age-related conditions
to maternally-inherited genes in mitochondrial DNA. Certain gene
mutations in early humans, who migrated north from warmer climates,
helped them adapt to the cold and burn calories more efficiently,
according to the report by the school’s Center for Molecular and
Mitochondrial Medicine and Genetics.
“In the Arctic what was going to kill [early humans] 10,000 years
ago was the extreme cold in the middle of winter,” said Douglas
Wallace, director of the center and co-author of the study. “Those
who survived, their [genetic] blueprints got changed and the amount
of energy in their bodies that goes to make heat increased.”
The mutations would have helped those people survive as they moved
from Africa to the higher latitudes and colder temperatures of Europe
and Asia while other humans died off. Descendants of people with the
mutated gene may be less prone to certain health problems because of
the way their bodies burn calories, Wallace said.
Mitochondria, located outside a human cell’s nucleus, burn
calories in our diets. That energy creates heat, which regulates body
temperature, and synthesizes adenosine triphosphate, a chemical that
allows people to think, move and make and repair cells and tissues.
Wallace likened mitochondria to a power plant and the
mitochondrial DNA to its blueprints, which determine how many
calories go to heating the body and how many go to performing tasks.
“If 90% of the energy from burning calories goes to making
[adenosine triphosphate], that efficient design is encoded in the
blueprint,” Wallace explained. “But if only 70% of the calories go to
that and the rest go to heating, that’s also in the blueprints.
People who live in the tropics, where it’s hot all the time, don’t
want a lot of waste heat. They are more efficient at making heat
work.”
If an Inuit Eskimo and native Kenyan ran a 220 dash, he said as an
example, the Kenyan would win with little effort because he would not
have the mutated gene and his body more efficiently sends energy to
his muscles.
On the other hand, the Eskimo who has the gene that has allowed
him to adapt to extreme cold, would win the same race in the Arctic
and the Kenyan would freeze to death.
Because the body produces oxygen radicals -- also known as free
radicals -- when mitochondria burn calories, how a person’s body uses
energy can affect their health. Someone with the mutated gene, he
said, would be more adapted to consume a higher fat diet without
producing excessive free radicals, which can build up to kill cells,
damage organs and age the body.
“People with cold-adapted genes are burning very hot,” Wallace
said. “They are generating a lot of excess heat and give off little
oxygen radicals. A person from the tropics who eats McDonalds
hamburgers is burning an efficient system and doesn’t need all those
calories.”
Europeans and Americans, he said, are a mixed bag of those with
the mutation, which is only passed on by the mother, and those
without. Understanding more about other genes will further explain
why higher fat and calorie diets affect some people more than others
and may help prevent age-related illnesses.
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