Obesity vaccine; Scientists link virus to weight gain
It sounds almost too good to be true for those struggling to keep their weight down — a simple jab to prevent unwanted kilos piling up.
But the prospect of a vaccine to stop you getting fat is drawing closer after scientists found compelling evidence linking obesity to an infectious virus.
Adenovirus-36 is found four times more often among the obese than in patients of a healthy weight.
Studies on animals indicate that the virus is responsible for adding up to 15 per cent to body weight.
The finding comes as levels of clinical obesity have spiralled to a record 27 per cent of the population. A further 36 per cent are overweight — making Britain the fattest nation in Western Europe.
The virus has a two-fold effect, not only irritating fat cells and causing them to become inflamed, but also preventing them dying and being flushed away by the body. The affected cells then accumulate, leading to obesity.
In a study using samples of healthy tissue from 80 women with breast cancer, four out of five who were overweight had the virus — against just one in five who were a normal weight.
Although the link could be the result of the cancer making the infection more likely, earlier research found that monkeys injected with the virus went on to gain weight. In other studies, at least 30 per cent of obese people were found to be infected but just 11 per cent of those with a healthy weight had the virus.
Adenoviruses are usually linked to colds and eye and bowel infections. A close relative of adenovirus-36 has already been proven to cause mice and monkeys to put on weight. Dr Wilmore Webley, of the University of Massachusetts, conducted the study into the breast cancer patients.
He says a vaccine for adenoviruses that cause respiratory problems is already used by the US Army — evidence a vaccine for the obesity virus could be developed.
Dr Richard Atkinson, Emeritus Professor at the University of Wisconsin, has already patented a vaccine for the virus but has been unable to attract enough funding to make it commercially. He told The Mail on Sunday that academics in South Korea had tested the vaccine in animals and it had prevented the virus from infecting fat cells.
He said the vaccine could be given to young people to protect them from getting the virus and stop fat cells accumulating.
With millions of people around the world dying from obesity-related diseases each year, a vaccine could save thousands of lives.
However, not everyone is convinced. Obesity expert Professor Nick Finer, of University College London, told New Scientist magazine that more studies were needed to prove a link between the virus and weight gain. ‘No matter how many association studies are reported, they do not prove causality,’ he said.
Category: Features, Pharmaceuticals