Reactive oxygen species: role in obesity and mitochondrial energy efficiency

Author:

Corkey Barbara E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, USA

Abstract

Changes correlating with increasing obesity include insulin resistance, hyperlipidaemia, hyperinsulinaemia, highly processed food and environmental toxins including plastics and air pollution. The relationship between the appearance of each of these potential causes and the onset of obesity is unknown. The cause(s) must precede obesity, the consequence, and temporally relate to its rising incidence. Macronutrients such as carbohydrates or fats are unlikely to cause obesity since these have long been constituents of human diets. Furthermore, food consumption and body weight have been well-regulated in most humans and other species until recent times. Thus, attention must focus on changes that have occurred in the last half-century and the relationship between such changes and specific populations that are impacted. The hypothesis presented here is that substances that have entered our bodies recently cause obesity by generating false and misleading information about energy status. We propose that this misinformation is caused by changes in the oxidation–reduction (redox) potential of metabolites that circulate and communicate to organs throughout the body. Examples are provided of food additives that generate reactive oxygen species and impact redox state, thereby, eliciting inappropriate tissue-specific functional changes, including insulin secretion. Reversal requires identification, neutralization, or removal of these compounds. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Causes of obesity: theories, conjectures and evidence (Part I)’.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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