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Fat Cells Remember Obesity, Driving the Yo-Yo Effect

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2024-11-25 19:30:05

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ETH Zurich researchers have identified an epigenetic memory in fat cells that drives the yo-yo effect after weight loss. Studies in mice and humans reveal that fat cells retain obesity markers, making weight regain easier. Preventing obesity early is crucial, as current technology cannot yet erase these epigenetic changes.

Anyone who has ever tried to get rid of a few extra kilos knows the frustration: the weight drops initially, only to be back within a matter of weeks – the yo-yo effect has struck. Researchers at ETH Zurich have now been able to show that this is all down to epigenetics.

Epigenetics is the part of genetics that’s based not on the sequence of genetic building blocks but on small yet characteristic chemical markers on these building blocks. The sequence of building blocks has evolved over a long period of time; we all inherit them from our parents. Epigenetic markers, on the other hand, are more dynamic: environmental factors, our eating habits and the condition of our body – such as obesity – can change them over the course of the lifetime. But they can remain stable for many years, sometimes decades, and during this time, they play a key role in determining which genes are active in our cells and which are not. “Epigenetics tells a cell what kind of cell it is and what it should do,” says Laura Hinte, a doctoral student in the group led by Ferdinand von Meyenn, Professor of Nutrition and Metabolic Epigenetics.

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