Common pesticide may contribute to global obesity crisis

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A commonly-used pesticide could be partially responsible for the global obesity epidemic, says a study led by McMaster University scientists.

Researchers discovered that chlorpyrifos, which is banned for use on foods in Canada but widely sprayed on fruits and vegetables in many other parts of the world, slows down the burning of calories in the brown adipose tissue of mice. Reducing this burning of calories, a process known as diet-induced thermogenesis, causes the body to store these extra calories, promoting obesity.

Scientists made the discovery after studying 34 commonly used pesticides and herbicides in and testing the effects of chlorpyrifos in mice fed high calorie diets. Their findings were published in Nature Communications and could have important implications for .

"Brown fat is the metabolic furnace in our body, burning calories, unlike normal fat that is used to store them. This generates heat and prevents calories from being deposited on our bodies as normal white fat. We know brown fat is activated during cold and when we eat," said senior author Gregory Steinberg, professor of medicine and co-director of the Centre for Metabolism, Obesity, and Diabetes Research at McMaster.

"Lifestyle changes around diet and exercise rarely lead to sustained . We think part of the problem may be this intrinsic dialling back of the metabolic furnace by chlorpyrifos."

Steinberg said chlorpyrifos would only need to inhibit energy use in brown fat by 40 calories every day to trigger obesity in adults, which would translate to an extra five lbs of weight gain per year.

He said that while several environmental toxins including chlorpyrifos have been linked to rising rates in both humans and animals, most of these studies have attributed weight gain to increases in and not the burning of calories.

While the use of chlorpyrifos on foods is banned in Canada, imported produce may still be treated with it.

"Although the findings have yet to be confirmed in humans, an important consideration, is that whenever possible consume fruits and vegetables from local Canadian sources and if consuming imported produce, make sure it is thoroughly washed," said Steinberg.

More information: Bo Wang et al, The pesticide chlorpyrifos promotes obesity by inhibiting diet-induced thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue, Nature Communications (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25384-y

Journal information: Nature Communications
Citation: Common pesticide may contribute to global obesity crisis (2021, August 27) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-08-common-pesticide-contribute-global-obesity.html
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