After studying genetically-modified mice, a team of nutrition scientists at the Texas Tech University have found that the discovery could lead to supplements and a diet regime that will increase metabolism and decrease muscle fatigue in humans.
Chad Paton, an assistant professor of nutritional biochemistry in the Department of Nutrition, Hospitality and Retailing, said he and his colleagues were curious as to why skeletal muscles of obese people contained a certain type of enzyme that breaks down saturated fats.
To test what that enzyme did, Paton's colleagues at the University of Wisconsin-Madison genetically modified mice so that their muscles would constantly produce the enzyme.
What we found in those animals is they had a hypermetabolic rate compared to the wild mice, increased energy consumption and greatly increased these animals exercise capacity, he said.
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The enzyme, called SCD1, converts saturated fat into monounsaturated fat, which is easier to metabolise. The liver will produce this enzyme depending on the fat content of the food consumed, he said.
Fatty adipose tissue produces it all the time as a way of regulating itself. Only in heavily-exercised muscle tissue or in case of obesity, does skeletal muscle produce the enzyme, he added.
Higher levels of linoleic acid could only mean one thing the modified mice were eating more food.
But Paton's team found that the modified mice weighed less than the wild mice. On top of that, their ability to exercise increased.
We found in the genetically-modified animals that they had a hypermetabolic rate, he said.