Fructose and survival

This 2023 paper provided mechanistic evidence, evolutionary theory, and testable scenarios for fructose metabolism differences from other nutrients:

“The fructose survival hypothesis proposes that obesity and metabolic disorders may have developed from over-stimulation of an evolutionary-based biologic response (survival switch) that aims to protect animals in advance of crisis. The response is characterized by hunger, thirst, foraging, weight gain, fat accumulation, insulin resistance, systemic inflammation, and increased blood pressure.

Unlike other nutrients, fructose reduces the active energy (adenosine triphosphate) in the cell, while blocking its regeneration from fat stores. This is mediated by intracellular uric acid, mitochondrial oxidative stress, inhibition of AMP kinase, and stimulation of vasopressin.

rstb20220230f04

Fructose metabolism is associated with oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, loss of cytoprotective transcription factor nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2), and a reduction in sirtuins that characterize the ageing process. Fructose also induces generation of advanced glycation end products much more effectively than glucose.

The fructose pathway is almost inevitably strongest in early disease states, for over time there is often fibrosis, inflammation, or mitochondrial loss that results in persistence of the disease process. The best time for intervention may turn out to be in early disease before conditions become less reversible.”

https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rstb.2022.0230 “The fructose survival hypothesis for obesity”


Time to exit fructose survival mode.

PXL_20230904_140453607

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