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ARS Home » Northeast Area » Boston, Massachusetts » Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center On Aging » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #297311

Title: Metabolically healthy obesity: origins and implications

Author
item DENIS, GERALD - Boston University Medical School
item OBIN, MARTIN - Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center On Aging At Tufts University

Submitted to: Molecular Aspects of Medicine
Publication Type: Review Article
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/1/2012
Publication Date: 2/1/2013
Citation: Denis, G.V., Obin, M.S. 2013. Metabolically healthy obesity: origins and implications. Molecular Aspects of Medicine . 34(1):59-70.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: When humans eat more and exercise less, they tend to become obese and unhealthy. The molecular pathways that link obesity to serious diseases like Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease have become a subject of intensive scientific investigation because the exploding prevalence of obesity worldwide represents a grave new threat to the health of hundreds of millions of people. However, obesity is not always destiny. Two important clinical populations have been valuable to understand the mechanisms behind this conundrum: individuals who exhibit metabolic dysfunction, diabetes and elevated cardiovascular disease risk despite a lean body type, and individuals who are relatively protected from these dangers despite significant obesity. Study of this second group of 'metabolically healthy obese' people in particular has been revealing because such individuals exhibit specific, identifiable, anatomic, cellular and molecular features that set them apart from the rest of us who suffer declining health with increasing weight. Here, we examine some of these features, including some mouse models that are informative of mechanism, and suggest hypotheses for further study, including the possibility that genes and pathways of the immune system might offer new diagnostic or therapeutic targets.