SummaryCancer-associated cachexia (CAC) is a wasting syndrome characterized by systemic inflammation, body weight loss, atrophy of white adipose tissue (WAT) and skeletal muscle. Limited therapeutic options are available and the underlying mechanisms are poorly defined. Here we show that a phenotypic switch from WAT to brown fat, a phenomenon termed WAT browning, takes place in the initial stages of CAC, before skeletal muscle atrophy. WAT browning is associated with increased expression of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), which uncouples mitochondrial respiration toward thermogenesis instead of ATP synthesis, leading to increased lipid mobilization and energy expenditure in cachectic mice. Chronic inflammation and the cytokine interleukin-6 in...
Extensive loss of adipose tissue is a hallmark of cancer cachexia but the cellular and molecular bas...
AbstractImplantation of a fast growing tumour to mice (Lewis lung carcinoma) resulted in a clear cac...
Abstract Cachexia commonly occurs at the terminal stage of cancer and has largely unclear molecular ...
SummaryCancer-associated cachexia (CAC) is a wasting syndrome characterized by systemic inflammation...
Cancer cachexia is a complex disorder that is driven by inflammation and metabolic imbalances, resul...
Cancer cachexia/anorexia is a complex syndrome that involves profound metabolic imbalances and is di...
Simple Summary Cachexia occurs frequently in cancer patients with deep metabolic derangements. The b...
Abstract Background Cancer cachexia is a progressive and multi-factorial metabolic syndrome characte...
Until a few years ago, adult humans were not thought to have brown adipose tissue (BAT). Now, this i...
Cancer-associated cachexia is a condition defined by a sustained net-negative energy imbalance. Alth...
Cachexia is a devastating muscle-wasting syndrome that occurs in patients who have chronic diseases....
Metabolic dysfunction contributes to the clinical deterioration observed in advanced cancer patients...
Cachexia is the involuntary loss of muscle and adipose tissue that strongly affects mortality and tr...
AbstractCachexia, a paraneoplastic syndrome markedly associated with worsened prognosis in cancer pa...
Cachexia has been recognized for a long time as an adverse effect of cancer. It is associated with r...
Extensive loss of adipose tissue is a hallmark of cancer cachexia but the cellular and molecular bas...
AbstractImplantation of a fast growing tumour to mice (Lewis lung carcinoma) resulted in a clear cac...
Abstract Cachexia commonly occurs at the terminal stage of cancer and has largely unclear molecular ...
SummaryCancer-associated cachexia (CAC) is a wasting syndrome characterized by systemic inflammation...
Cancer cachexia is a complex disorder that is driven by inflammation and metabolic imbalances, resul...
Cancer cachexia/anorexia is a complex syndrome that involves profound metabolic imbalances and is di...
Simple Summary Cachexia occurs frequently in cancer patients with deep metabolic derangements. The b...
Abstract Background Cancer cachexia is a progressive and multi-factorial metabolic syndrome characte...
Until a few years ago, adult humans were not thought to have brown adipose tissue (BAT). Now, this i...
Cancer-associated cachexia is a condition defined by a sustained net-negative energy imbalance. Alth...
Cachexia is a devastating muscle-wasting syndrome that occurs in patients who have chronic diseases....
Metabolic dysfunction contributes to the clinical deterioration observed in advanced cancer patients...
Cachexia is the involuntary loss of muscle and adipose tissue that strongly affects mortality and tr...
AbstractCachexia, a paraneoplastic syndrome markedly associated with worsened prognosis in cancer pa...
Cachexia has been recognized for a long time as an adverse effect of cancer. It is associated with r...
Extensive loss of adipose tissue is a hallmark of cancer cachexia but the cellular and molecular bas...
AbstractImplantation of a fast growing tumour to mice (Lewis lung carcinoma) resulted in a clear cac...
Abstract Cachexia commonly occurs at the terminal stage of cancer and has largely unclear molecular ...