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April 9, 2004|Volume 32, Number 25



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Research suggests STAT3 proteins play
key role in regulating weight, fertility

Protein molecules that help maintain a healthy body temperature, electrolyte balance, respiration, heart rate and other critical functions also appear to regulate weight and fertility, according to Yale researchers.

STAT3 proteins are regulatory molecules that signal cell functions for activating genes. When the STAT3 molecules are disrupted in mice, the animals either die before they are born, or overeat and become obese, diabetic and infertile, according to the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Mice with disrupted STAT3 begin to gain weight at six to eight weeks old and weigh twice as much as normal mice by adulthood. The excess body mass was almost exclusively fat. Livers of the mice also were severely enlarged with fat deposits.

The senior author, Xin-Yuan Fu of the Department of Pathology at the School of Medicine, says the study contradicts previous research that concluded STAT3 plays no role in reproduction and growth and only a marginal role in glucose regulation.

The study also raises more questions about leptin, a protein produced by fat cells and thought to play an important role in signaling the reduction of body fat.

"The mutant mice had an oversupply of Leptin, yet still became obese, suggesting a Leptin-resistant condition," Fu says.

During embryonic development, STAT3 is found in areas of the brain where nerve cell proliferation and differentiation take place. In adults, STAT3 has been implicated in the regulation of energy balance through its effect on Leptin. This new study provides direct evidence for this role.

Fu says the study shows that body weight and fertility are essentially controlled through STAT3 functions in the brain. These discoveries, he notes, could help in the development of new therapeutics to treat obesity and infertility.

Co-authors of this report include Qian Gao, Michael J. Wolfgang, Susanne Neschen, Katsutaro Morino, Tamas L. Horvath and Gerald I. Shulman of Yale.

-- By Jacqueline Weaver


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Former V.P. to discuss 'The Climate Emergency'

Fair, forum explore 'diverse paths of disabilities'

Institute of Sacred Music will sing praises to its 30th anniversary . . .

YCIAS program to focus on issues of order, conflict

Globalization is topic of Chubb Lecture . . .

Court ruling on integration is being undermined, says Clinton

Religion must be kept out of public policy, Albright urges

From Mona Lisa to Marilyn, curator traces the art of smiling

Neurologist who wrote 'Awakenings' to deliver Tanner Lectures

Symposium will explore medical imagery through the ages

Journalist to discuss issue of civil liberties since 9/11

Renowned violinist and music professor Erick Friedman dies

Ongoing 'rewiring' in appetite center may be linked to obesity . . .

Researchers identify system that detects certain viruses

New center to foster integrated research on multiple sclerosis

Five undergraduates win competitive national scholarships

Conference and performance celebrate development of French opera

The Dramat ends season with comic tale about life in rural Ireland

Human rights experts to examine women's rights under Islamic law

Yale historian honored for book on America's welfare state

Research suggests STAT3 proteins play key role . . .

Study: Drug used to thwart alcoholism also effective for . . .

Yale program on children and violence designates training center

Summit to explore future of student service in developing countries

Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes


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