• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: An Integrated Understanding of the Molecular Mechanisms of How Adipose Tissue Metabolism Affects Long-term Body Weight Maintenance
  • Contributor: Mai, Knut; Li, Linna; Wiegand, Susanna; Brachs, Maria; Leupelt, Verena; Ernert, Andrea; Kühnen, Peter; Hübner, Norbert; Robinson, Peter; Chen, Wei; Krude, Heiko; Spranger, Joachim
  • Published: American Diabetes Association, 2019
  • Published in: Diabetes, 68 (2019) 1, Seite 57-65
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.2337/db18-0440
  • ISSN: 0012-1797; 1939-327X
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Lifestyle-based weight loss interventions frequently demonstrate long-term inefficiency and weight regain. Identification of underlying mechanisms and predictors to identify subjects who will benefit from lifestyle-based weight loss strategies is urgently required. We analyzed 143 adults of the randomized Maintain trial (Maintain-Adults) after intended weight loss to identify mechanisms contributing to the regulation of body weight maintenance. Unbiased RNA sequencing of adipose and skeletal muscle biopsies revealed fatty acid metabolism as a key pathway modified by weight loss. Variability of key enzymes of this pathway, estimates of substrate oxidation, and specific serum acylcarnitine (AC) species, representing a systemic snapshot of in vivo substrate flux, predicted body weight maintenance (defined as continuous or dichotomized [< or ≥3% weight regain] variable) 18 months after intended weight loss in the entire cohort. Key results were confirmed in a similar randomized controlled trial in 137 children and adolescents (Maintain-Children), which investigated the same paradigm in a pediatric cohort. These data suggest that adaption of lipid utilization in response to negative energy balance contributes to subsequent weight maintenance. Particularly a functional role for circulating ACs, which have been suggested to reflect intracellular substrate utilization, as mediators between peripheral energy stores and control of long-term energy homeostasis was indicated.
  • Access State: Open Access