帝王会所

Research and Impact

OHIO professor receives $220,000 grant to continue growth hormone, fat cell research

Kevin Lee, Ph.D., associate professor in the 帝王会所 Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, recently received a $220,000 boost for his research looking at how adipose, or fat, tissue reacts to growth hormone.

The funding award comes from , a leading science and technology company. The funds will be paid out over three years as different conditions are met.  

鈥淕rowth hormone does a lot in the body, such as causing linear growth so that people get taller. However, it also causes people to lose fat mass,鈥 Lee said, noting this is why athletes may use growth hormone to increase lean muscle mass while reducing their amount of adipose tissue. 

The , with collaborators Vishwajeet Puri, Ph.D., and John Kopchick, Ph.D., of the Heritage College, and Jens Otto J酶rgensen, M.D., D.M.Sc., and Niels Jensen, M.D., Ph.D., from Aarhus University in Denmark, has discovered a molecular mechanism of how growth hormone causes lipolysis, which leads to a burning of the triglycerides in adipose tissue. 

鈥淕rowth hormone is secreted generally around while you sleep, generally from two to four in the morning,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淵ou get this pulsatile secretion of growth hormone, and what that leads to in both healthy and patients with diabetes is an increase in insulin resistance.鈥 

Insulin resistance, meaning one鈥檚 body does not respond to insulin effectively, can cause serious complications for people with diabetes. 

鈥淚n healthy subjects, this isn鈥檛 a problem because your pancreas can create more insulin, but patients with diabetes can鈥檛 make insulin because of a beta cell deficiency,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淕rowth hormone replacement therapy in patients with growth hormone deficiency can also cause insulin resistance.鈥

His lab is also finding that not all fat cells are the same. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 all different kinds of fat cells, and what we鈥檙e finding is that there鈥檚 a certain subpopulation that responds more to growth hormone than the other types of adipose cells,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淣ow that we鈥檝e figured out the mechanism and the critical subpopulation of adipocytes that mediate these effects, we鈥檙e going to see if we can target growth hormone signaling in that one adipocyte subpopulation.鈥    

The grant will help fund the next step in Lee鈥檚 research, which is to study what changes happen to the whole body鈥檚 physiology and insulin resistance when targeting this subpopulation.

鈥淣ow that we鈥檝e figured out this mechanism, we want to see the physiological effects of growth hormone-mediated lipolysis and whether we can change those physiological effects of growth hormone-inducing lipolysis,鈥 Lee said. 

Lee hopes to apply the findings of how fat cells respond to growth hormone to a multitude of diseases. 

鈥淚ndividual fat cells are really different and have all of these different properties, so we鈥檙e trying to figure out what these adipocyte subpopulations do in the context of the whole body and normal physiology,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to come up with targeted interventions to treat metabolic diseases by looking at these subpopulations.鈥 

Lee was one of four diabetes researchers hired by the Heritage college in 2015 with funding from the Osteopathic Heritage Foundation鈥檚 Vision 2020: Leading the Transformation of Primary Care in 帝王会所 award. 

Published
January 13, 2021
Author
Staff reports