Source
Research Institute, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Abstract
As
dietary exposure to fructose has increased over the past 40 years,
there is growing concern that high fructose consumption in humans may be
in part responsible for the rising incidence of obesity worldwide.
Obesity is associated with a host of metabolic challenges, collectively
termed the metabolic syndrome. Fructose is a highly lipogenic sugar that
has profound metabolic effects in the liver and has been associated
with many of the components of the metabolic syndrome (insulin
resistance, elevated waist circumference, dyslipidemia, and
hypertension). Recent evidence has also uncovered effects of fructose in
other tissues, including adipose tissue, the brain, and the
gastrointestinal system, that may provide new insight into the metabolic
consequences of high-fructose diets. Fructose feeding has now been
shown to alter gene expression patterns (such as peroxisome
proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α/β in the liver), alter
satiety factors in the brain, increase inflammation, reactive oxygen
species, and portal endotoxin concentrations via Toll-like receptors,
and induce leptin resistance. This review highlights recent findings in
fructose feeding studies in both human and animal models with a focus on
the molecular and biochemical mechanisms that underlie the development
of insulin resistance, hepatic steatosis, and the metabolic syndrome.
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