| Literature DB >> 32582754 |
Abstract
The modern obesity epidemic with associated disorders of metabolism and cancer has been attributed to the presence of "thrifty genes". In the distant past, these genes helped the organism to improve energy efficiency and store excess energy safely as fat to survive periods of famine, but in the present day obesogenic environment, have turned detrimental. I propose PTEN as the likely gene as it has functions that span metabolism, cancer and reproduction, all of which are deranged in obesity and insulin resistance. The activity of PTEN can be calibrated in utero by availability of nutrients by the methylation arm of the epigenetic pathway. Deficiency of protein and choline has been shown to upregulate DNA methyltransferases (DNMT), especially 1 and 3a; these can then methylate promoter region of PTEN and suppress its expression. Thus, the gene is tuned like a metabolic rheostat proportional to the availability of specific nutrients, and the resultant "dose" of the protein, which sits astride and negatively regulates the insulin-PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, decides energy usage and proliferation. This "fixes" the metabolic capacity of the organism periconceptionally to a specific postnatal level of nutrition, but when faced with a discordant environment, leads to obesity related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: NAFLD; PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10); carcinogenesis; diabetes mellitus; insulin resistance; polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD); thrifty gene hypothesis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32582754 PMCID: PMC7290048 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2020.00081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Potential benefits of reduced PTEN expression.
| 1 | Improved cell proliferation and survival |
| 2 | Resistance to starvation |
| 3 | Energy efficiency |
| 4 | Efficient storage of excess fat |
| 5 | Smaller offspring |
| 6 | Altered behavior (hyperphagia) |
| 7 | Early fertility |
| 8 | Reduced life span (quicker turn over) |
Summary of evidence supporting the hypothesis.
| 1. Specific nutritional deficiency reduces PTEN expression in tissues & offspring | Experimental data with low protein, methionine and choline diets. | ( |
| 2.This effect is through epigenetic pathway | Experimental data shows upregulation of DNMT3a. | ( |
| 1. Obesity | Seen in Cowden syndrome. | ( |
| HFD causes obesity with PTEN deleted models. | ( | |
| Hypermethylated (downregulated) PTEN is associated with metabolic syndrome. | ( | |
| 2. Fatty liver (NAFLD) | Liver specific deletion causes fatty liver. | ( |
| 3.Cancer | Tumor suppressor gene. | ( |
| Low expression in multiple obesity related cancers (ORCs). | ( | |
| 4.PCOS | Deletion in theca-interstitial cells leads to features of PCOS. | ( |