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This article originally posted 12 May, 2011 and appeared in  DietObesityType 2 DiabetesIssue 573

Study Helps Clarify Link between High-Fat Diet and Type 2 Diabetes

New research adds clarity to the connection that saturated fatty acids but not the unsaturated type can activate immune cells to produce an inflammatory protein, called interleukin-1beta....

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A diet high in saturated fat is a key contributor to Type 2 diabetes, a major health threat worldwide. Several decades ago scientists noticed that people with Type 2 diabetes have overly active immune responses, leaving their bodies rife with inflammatory chemicals.

In addition, people who acquire the disease are typically obese and are resistant to insulin, the hormone that removes sugar from the blood and stores it as energy.

For years no one has known exactly how the three characteristics are related. But a handful of studies suggest that they are inextricably linked.

New research from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine adds clarity to the connection. The study finds that saturated fatty acids but not the unsaturated type can activate immune cells to produce an inflammatory protein, called interleukin-1beta.

"The cellular path that mediates fatty acid metabolism is also the one that causes interleukin-1beta production," says senior study co-author Jenny Y. Ting, PhD, William Kenan Rand Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology.

"Interleukin-1beta then acts on tissues and organs such as the liver, muscle and fat (adipose) to turn off their response to insulin, making them insulin resistant. As a result, activation of this pathway by fatty acid can lead to insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes symptoms."

Nature Immunology April 10, 2011

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This article originally posted 12 May, 2011 and appeared in  DietObesityType 2 DiabetesIssue 573

Past five issues: Special Edition - Getting Patients on Track | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 84 | Issue 625 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 83 | Issue 624 |

 
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