‘Exciting’ discovery on metabolic disease triggers

3 minute read


High-fat diet fuels production of a key biomarker for metabolic diseases, researchers have found.


An international team of researchers led by Monash University has identified a toxic lipid they believe may trigger metabolic diseases such as obesity, fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes.

Their research, which involved both preclinical and human studies, has found that the lipid known as “C16 ceramide” is produced inside the gut and, subsequently, exported out of the gut via the lymphatic system in response to a diet high in saturated fats.

Once outside the gut, C16 ceramide has been associated with a myriad of health issues and has even been flagged as a key biomarker for various metabolic diseases. 

The research was published last week in Science Advances.

Senior author and research fellow from the Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences (MIPS), Dr Sarah Turpin-Nolan, said the team was excited by the potential implications of the new discovery.

“Ceramides are a family of waxy lipid molecules, with the C16 ceramide considered to be ‘bad’ due to its direct link to fatty liver disease and T2D,” she said.

“In this study we have, for the first time, uncovered that in humans this toxic lipid increases when there is more fat in the gut which makes more C16 ceramide available to be transported out of the gut, via the lymphatic system, to metabolic organs such as the liver.

“This information is critical in paving the way for research into new drugs that target C16 ceramide and, consequently, block it from leaving the gut and progressing into a metabolic disease like obesity, T2D or metabolic-associated fatty liver disease.”

Co-senior author and head of the MIPS Cellular and Molecular Metabolism Laboratory, Professor Mark Febbraio, said the team had also discovered a diverse new range of lipid species.

“Through screening of lipids derived in the gut we identified many more lipid species than were previously known to exist. All of these ‘behaved’ as you’d expect, except of course for the metabolically harmful C16 ceramide that increased in response to high-fat diets in both rats and humans,” he said.

“We believe this exciting and promising new information supports the development of an updated model for how the human body generates and transports lipids from the gut via the lymphatic system when derived from high-fat diets.

“As far as next steps go, further research is now required to investigate exactly where these toxic fats go and if new medicines targeting lipids produced in the gut could reduce lipid accumulation in metabolic organs, including the liver, to treat metabolic diseases like obesity and metabolic-associated fatty liver disease.” 

Science Advances 2024, online 23 August

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