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Dive into the research topics where Abdul G. Dulloo is active.

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Featured researches published by Abdul G. Dulloo.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Uncoupling protein-3: a new member of the mitochondrial carrier family with tissue-specific expression.

Olivier Boss; Sonia Samec; Ariane Paoloni-Giacobino; Colette Rossier; Abdul G. Dulloo; Josiane Seydoux; Patrick Muzzin; Jean-Paul Giacobino

Brown adipose tissue (BAT) and skeletal muscle are important sites of nonshivering thermogenesis. The uncoupling protein‐1 (UCP1) is the main effector of nonshivering thermogenesis in BAT and the recently described ubiquitous UCP2 [1] has been implicated in energy balance. In an attempt to better understand the biochemical events underlying nonshivering thermogenesis in muscle, we screened a human skeletal muscle cDNA library and isolated three clones: UCP2, UCP3L and UCP3S. The novel UCP3 was 57% and 73% identical to human UCP1 and UCP2, respectively, highly skeletal muscle‐specific and its expression was unaffected by cold acclimation. This new member of the UCP family is a candidate protein for the modulation of the respiratory control in skeletal muscle.


International Journal of Obesity | 2000

Green tea and thermogenesis: interactions between catechin-polyphenols, caffeine and sympathetic activity

Abdul G. Dulloo; Josiane Seydoux; Lucien Girardier; P Chantre; J Vandermander

The thermogenic effect of tea is generally attributed to its caffeine content. We report here that a green tea extract stimulates brown adipose tissue thermogenesis to an extent which is much greater than can be attributed to its caffeine content per se, and that its thermogenic properties could reside primarily in an interaction between its high content in catechin-polyphenols and caffeine with sympathetically released noradrenaline (NA). Since catechin-polyphenols are known to be capable of inhibiting catechol-O-methyl-transferase (the enzyme that degrades NA), and caffeine to inhibit trancellular phosphodiesterases (enzymes that break down NA-induced cAMP), it is proposed that the green tea extract, via its catechin-polyphenols and caffeine, is effective in stimulating thermogenesis by relieving inhibition at different control points along the NA–cAMP axis. Such a synergistic interaction between catechin-polyphenols and caffeine to augment and prolong sympathetic stimulation of thermogenesis could be of value in assisting the management of obesity.


The FASEB Journal | 1998

Role of UCP homologues in skeletal muscles and brown adipose tissue: mediators of thermogenesis or regulators of lipids as fuel substrate?

Sonia Samec; Josiane Seydoux; Abdul G. Dulloo

The mRNA expressions of UCP2 and UCP3, two newly described genes with high sequence homology to the uncoupling protein UCP1 in brown adipose tissue (BAT), were examined in two skeletal muscles (gastrocnemius and soleus) as well as in interscapular BAT (IBAT) of the rat in response to food deprivation and controlled refeeding. In IBAT (a tissue highly dependent on lipids for thermogenesis), the pattern of mRNA expression of UCP2 and UCP3 closely follows that of UCP1: it was markedly down‐regulated during food deprivation (when this tissues thermogenesis and lipid fuel requirements are decreased) and restored to control levels by day 5 of refeeding. By contrast, in the gastrocnemius muscle (a mixed fiber type muscle with a high capacity to shift between glucose and lipids as fuel substrate), mRNA expression of both UCP2 and UCP3 mRNA was found to be markedly up‐regulated during food deprivation (when this tissues thermogenesis is also decreased but its lipid fuel utilization is increased). The expressions were subsequently found to be markedly down‐regulated upon transition to refeeding, with mRNA levels remaining below control levels on days 3, 5, and 10 of refeeding (period of enhanced efficiency of body fat deposition). In the soleus muscle (an oxidative type muscle with higher dependency on lipids than the gastrocnemius, and hence with a lower capacity to shift between lipids and glucose as fuel substrate), UCP homologues were also found to be up‐regulated during food deprivation, but changes in their mRNA expression contrast with those in the gastrocnemius muscle both in their much lower magnitude of response to food deprivation and in their more rapid restoration to control levels during refeeding. Up‐regulation of UCP2 and UCP3 gene expressions in skeletal muscle during food deprivation was found to persist at thermoneutrality (i.e., under conditions of reduced thermoregulatory thermogenesis). Together, these tissue‐dependent differential mRNA expressions of the UCP homologues in IBAT, gastrocnemius, and soleus muscles during food deprivation and refeeding are much more consistent with a role for UCP2 and UCP3 in the regulation of lipids as fuel substrate rather than as mediators of regulatory thermogenesis.—Samec, S., Seydoux, J., Dulloo, A. G. Role of UCP homologues in skeletal muscles and brown adipose tissue: mediators of thermogenesis or regulators of lipids as fuel substrate? FASEB J. 12, 715–724 (1998)


FEBS Letters | 1999

UCP2 and UCP3 rise in starved rat skeletal muscle but mitochondrial proton conductance is unchanged.

Susana Cadenas; Julie A. Buckingham; Sonia Samec; Josiane Seydoux; Nanni Din; Abdul G. Dulloo; Martin D. Brand

The relationship between UCP2 and UCP3 expression and mitochondrial proton conductance of rat skeletal muscle was examined. Rats were starved for 24 h and the levels of UCP2 and UCP3 mRNA and UCP3 protein were determined by Northern and Western blots. Proton conductance was measured by titrating mitochondrial respiration rate and membrane potential with malonate. Starvation increased UCP2 and UCP3 mRNA levels more than 5‐fold and 4‐fold, respectively, and UCP3 protein levels by 2‐fold. However, proton conductance remained unchanged. These results suggest either that Northern and Western blots do not reflect the levels of active protein or that these UCPs do not catalyse the basal proton conductance in skeletal muscle mitochondria.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Tissue-dependent upregulation of rat uncoupling protein-2 expression in response to fasting or cold.

Olivier Boss; Sonia Samec; Abdul G. Dulloo; Josiane Seydoux; Patrick Muzzin; Jean-Paul Giacobino

The control of uncoupling protein‐2 (UCP2) mRNA expression in rat brown adipose tissue (BAT), heart and skeletal muscles was examined. Cold exposure (48 h) increased UCP2 mRNA in BAT, heart and soleus muscle by 2.4‐, 4.3‐ and 2.6‐fold, respectively. Fasting (48 h) had no effect on UCP2 mRNA expression neither in BAT nor in heart, but markedly increased it in skeletal muscles. While the upregulation of UCP2 mRNA in response to cold exposure is in line with a putative uncoupling role for this protein in thermoregulatory thermogenesis, the unexpected upregulation of UCP2 in skeletal muscles in response to fasting seems inconsistent with its role as an uncoupling protein involved in dietary regulation of thermogenesis.


International Journal of Obesity | 2004

Ectopic fat storage in heart, blood vessels and kidneys in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases

Jean-Pierre Montani; Joan F. Carroll; Terry M. Dwyer; Vladan Antic; Zhihong Yang; Abdul G. Dulloo

In humans and most animal models, the development of obesity leads not only to increased fat depots in classical adipose tissue locations but also to significant lipid deposits within and around other tissues and organs, a phenomenon known as ectopic fat storage. The purpose of this review is to explore the possible locations of ectopic fat in key target-organs of cardiovascular control (heart, blood vessels and kidneys) and to propose how ectopic fat storage can play a role in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases associated with obesity. In animals fed a high-fat diet, cardiac fat depots within and around the heart impair both systolic and diastolic functions, and may in the long-term promote heart failure. Accumulation of fat around blood vessels (perivascular fat) may affect vascular function in a paracrine manner, as perivascular fat cells secrete vascular relaxing factors, proatherogenic cytokines and smooth muscle cell growth factors. Furthermore, high amounts of perivascular fat could mechanically contribute to the increased vascular stiffness seen in obesity. Finally, accumulation of fat in the renal sinus may limit the outflow of blood and lymph from the kidney, which would alter intrarenal physical forces and promote sodium reabsorption and arterial hypertension. Taken together, ectopic fat storage in key target-organs of cardiovascular control may impair their functions, contributing to the increased prevalence of cardiovascular diseases in obese subjects.


Current Biology | 2006

Lack of food anticipation in Per2 mutant mice.

Céline A. Feillet; Jürgen A. Ripperger; Maria Chiara Magnone; Abdul G. Dulloo; Urs Albrecht; Etienne Challet

Predicting time of food availability is key for survival in most animals. Under restricted feeding conditions, this prediction is manifested in anticipatory bouts of locomotor activity and body temperature. This process seems to be driven by a food-entrainable oscillator independent of the main, light-entrainable clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus . Although the SCN clockwork involves self-sustaining transcriptional and translational feedback loops based on rhythmic expression of mRNA and proteins of clock genes , the molecular mechanisms responsible for food anticipation are not well understood. Period genes Per1 and Per2 are crucial for the SCNs resetting to light . Here, we investigated the role of these genes in circadian anticipatory behavior by studying rest-activity and body-temperature rhythms of Per1 and Per2 mutant mice under restricted feeding conditions. We also monitored expression of clock genes in the SCN and peripheral tissues. Whereas wild-type and Per1 mutant mice expressed regular food-anticipatory activity, Per2 mutant mice did not show food anticipation. In peripheral tissues, however, phase shifts of clock-gene expression in response to timed food restriction were comparable in all genotypes. In conclusion, a mutation in Per2 abolishes anticipation of mealtime, without interfering with peripheral synchronization by feeding cycles.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Fructose ingestion acutely elevates blood pressure in healthy young humans.

Clive M. Brown; Abdul G. Dulloo; Gayathri Yepuri; Jean-Pierre Montani

Overconsumption of fructose, particularly in the form of soft drinks, is increasingly recognized as a public health concern. The acute cardiovascular responses to ingesting fructose have not, however, been well-studied in humans. In this randomized crossover study, we compared cardiovascular autonomic regulation after ingesting water and drinks containing either glucose or fructose in 15 healthy volunteers (aged 21-33 yr). The total volume of each drink was 500 ml, and the sugar content 60 g. For 30 min before and 2 h after each drink, we recorded beat-to-beat heart rate, arterial blood pressure, and cardiac output. Energy expenditure was determined on a minute-by-minute basis. Ingesting the fructose drink significantly increased blood pressure, heart rate, and cardiac output but not total peripheral resistance. Glucose ingestion resulted in a significantly greater increase in cardiac output than fructose but no change in blood pressure and a concomitant decrease in total peripheral resistance. Ingesting glucose and fructose, but not water, significantly increased blood pressure variability and decreased cardiovagal baroreflex sensitivity. Energy expenditure increased by a similar amount after glucose and fructose ingestion, but fructose elicited a significantly greater increase in respiratory quotient. These results show that ingestion of glucose and fructose drinks is characterized by specific hemodynamic responses. In particular, fructose ingestion elicits an increase in blood pressure that is probably mediated by an increase in cardiac output without compensatory peripheral vasodilatation.


International Journal of Obesity | 2002

Pathways from obesity to hypertension: from the perspective of a vicious triangle

J-P Montani; Vladan Antic; Zhihong Yang; Abdul G. Dulloo

Obesity and arterial hypertension are important public health problems. Both overweight and hypertension predispose to cardiovascular diseases, such as myocardial infarction, stroke and renal failure. Moreover, overweight clearly predisposes to hypertension, and thus to an increased prevalence of cardiovascular diseases. This in turn favors inactivity and further weight gain, leading to an exacerbation of cardiovascular disorders. Obesity, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases thus contribute to three corners of a vicious triangle. It is within this conceptual framework that this paper reviews the pathogenesis of obesity-related hypertension, which is highly complex. Many factors act together to promote vasoconstriction and sodium retention. Leptin, free fatty acids and insulin, whose levels are increased in obesity, may act synergistically to stimulate sympathetic activity and vasoconstriction. In addition, obesity-induced insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction may operate as amplifiers of the vasoconstrictor response. Finally, increased renal tubular reabsorption of sodium may also occur, caused by an increased renal sympathetic nerve activity, the direct effect of insulin, hyperactivity of the renin–angiotensin system and possibly by an alteration of intrarenal physical forces. All together, these factors will lead to sustained hypertension. Because the prevalence of obesity was steadily increasing in the last decades, leading to an increased prevalence of hypertension and cardiovascular disorders, obesity and hypertension will most likely become the health challenges of the twenty-first century.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2001

Uncoupling proteins: their roles in adaptive thermogenesis and substrate metabolism reconsidered

Abdul G. Dulloo; Sonia Samec

During the past few years, there have been two major developments, if not revolutions, in the field of energy balance and weight regulation. The first at the molecular level, which was catalysed by developments in DNA screening technology together with the mapping of the human genome, has been the tremendous advances made in the identification of molecules that play a role in the control of food intake and metabolic rate. The second, at the systemic level, which centered upon the use of modern technologies or more robust analytical techniques for assessing human energy expenditure in response to starvation and overfeeding, has been the publication of several papers providing strong evidence that adaptive thermogenesis plays a much more important role in the regulation of body weight and body composition than previously thought. Within these same few years, several new members of the mitochondrial carrier protein family have been identified in a variety of tissues and organs. All apparently possess uncoupling properties in genetically-modified systems, with two of them (uncoupling protein (UCP) 2 and UCP3) being expressed in adipose tissues and skeletal muscles, which are generally recognised as important sites for variations in thermogenesis and/or in substrate oxidation. Considered as breakthrough discoveries, the cloning of these genes has generated considerable optimism for rapid advances in our molecular understanding of adaptive thermogenesis, and for the identification of new targets for pharmacological management of obesity and cachexia. The present paper traces first, from a historical perspective, the landmark events in the field of thermogenesis that led to the identification of these genes encoding candidate UCP, and then addresses the controversies and on-going debate about their physiological importance in adaptive thermogenesis, in lipid oxidation or in oxidative stress. The general conclusion is that UCP2 and UCP3 may have distinct primary functions, with UCP3 implicated in regulating the flux of lipid substrates across the mitochondria and UCP2 in the control of mitochondrial generation of reactive oxygen species. The distinct functions of these two UCP1 homologues have been incorporated in a conceptual model to illustrate how UCP2 and UCP3 may act in concert in the overall regulation of lipid oxidation concomitant to the prevention of lipid-induced oxidative damage.

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Yves Schutz

University of Fribourg

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