Testosterone Decreases Fat and Increases Muscle: Study Explores Mechanism of Action

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Nelson Vergel

Founder, ExcelMale.com
PRDM16 is a gene that helps control the development of two types of fat in the body: brown and white fat. Brown fat helps generate heat and burns energy, while white fat stores energy. PRDM16 plays a key role in determining whether cells become brown fat or muscle. It's also involved in certain health conditions like leukemia. Scientists are studying it because understanding how it works could help develop treatments for obesity by boosting energy-burning brown fat in the body.

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A PRDM16-driven signal regulates body composition in testosterone-treated hypogonadal men

Siresha Bathina,*Siresha Bathina1,2*Georgia Colleluori&#x;Georgia Colleluori1†Dennis T. Villareal,Dennis T. Villareal1,2Lina Aguirre,Lina Aguirre3,4Rui Chen,Rui Chen1,2Reina Armamento-Villareal,Reina Armamento-Villareal1,2

1Division of Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States
2Department of Medicine, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center, Houston, TX, United States
3Department of Medicine, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM, United States
4Department of Medicine, New Mexico VA Health Care System, Albuquerque, NM, United States

Background: Testosterone (T) therapy increases lean mass and reduces total body and truncal fat mass in hypogonadal men. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms for the reciprocal changes in fat and lean mass in humans are not entirely clear.

Methods: Secondary analysis of specimens obtained from a single-arm, open-label clinical trial on pharmacogenetics of response to T therapy in men with late-onset hypogonadism, conducted between 2011 and 2016 involving 105 men (40-74 years old), who were given intramuscular T cypionate 200 mg every 2 weeks for 18 months. Subcutaneous fat (SCF), peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and serum were obtained from the participants at different time points of the study. We measured transcription factors for adipogenesis and myogenesis in the SCF, and PBMC, respectively, by real-time quantitative PCR at baseline and 6 months. Serum levels of FOLLISTATIN, PAX7, MYOSTATIN, ADIPSIN, and PRDM16 were measured by ELISA.

Results: As expected, there was a significant increase in T and estradiol levels after 6 months of T therapy. There was also a reduction in fat mass and an increase in lean mass after 6 months of T therapy. Gene-protein studies showed a significant reduction in the expression of the adipogenic markers PPARγ in SCF and ADIPSIN levels in the serum, together with a concomitant significant increase in the expression of myogenic markers, MYOD in PBMC and PAX7 and FOLLISTATIN levels in the serum after 6 months of T therapy compared to baseline. Interestingly, there was a significant increase in the adipo-myogenic switch, PRDM16, expression in SCF and PBMC, and in circulating protein levels in the serum after 6 months of T therapy, which is likely from increased estradiol.

Conclusion: Our study supports that molecular shift from the adipogenic to the myogenic pathway in men with hypogonadism treated with T could be mediated directly or indirectly by enhanced PRDM16 activity, in turn a result from increased estradiol level. This might have led to the reduction in body fat and increase in lean mass commonly seen in hypogonadal men treated with T.
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testosterone estradiol effect on fat and muscle.jpg
 
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Defy Medical TRT clinic doctor
The study above explains why the results of this study showed that low estradiol increases fat:

 
"In summary, we conducted a dose-ranging study to determine the relative testosterone doses and associated serum levels at which body composition, strength, and sexual function initially decline. By examining these relationships with and without suppression of estrogen synthesis, we found that lean mass, muscle size, and strength are regulated by androgens; fat accumulation is primarily a consequence of estrogen deficiency; and sexual function is regulated by both androgens and estrogens. Delineation of the degrees of hypogonadism at which undesirable consequences develop and of the relative roles of androgens and estrogens in each outcome should facilitate the development of more rational approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of hypogonadism in men."

 
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