Gaining

Number of fat cells

A number of things can stimulate adipogenesis in adults including medications (e.g. TZDs) and yes, Obesity.

Check out this PubMed article: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879274/

Particulary this part right here

Excessive food/energy intake leads to the expansion of adipose tissues, including both increased numbers of fat cells, i.e., adipogenesis, and increased size of individual adipocytes (hypertrophy).


To my understanding, our bodies will generate new fat cells well beyond puberty if we keep gaining weight. When our fat cells are full, they will both enlarge in size and increase in number.

Here is another example from this pubmed study: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879274/

In adults, fat cell number is constant over time in spite of a large turnover (about 10% of the fat cells per year) when body weight is stable. A decrease in body weight only changes fat cell size (becoming smaller), whereas an increase in body weight causes elevation of both fat cell size and number in adults.


The increase in size is bad for us, so ideally the more we can do to stimulate adipogensis, the more likely we are to be metabolically healthy while obese.

Also if you look at the wikipedia page for Lipotoxicity, you'll see that it's still undetermined whether or not Obesity is the cause.

The causative role of obesity in lipotoxicity is controversial. Some researchers claim that obesity has protective effects against lipotoxicity as it results in extra adipose tissue in which excess lipids can be stored.



My personal theory is that when you combine weight gain with "healthy" behaviors like exercise, our bodies are move in the direction of adipogenesis over fat cell hypertorphy. However, I'm willing to bet that it's mostly determined by genetics and that you're only able to influence things to a certain degree.
2 months

Number of fat cells

A number of things can stimulate adipogenesis in adults including medications (e.g. TZDs) and yes, Obesity.

Check out this PubMed article: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879274/

Particulary this part right here

Excessive food/energy intake leads to the expansion of adipose tissues, including both increased numbers of fat cells, i.e., adipogenesis, and increased size of individual adipocytes (hypertrophy).


To my understanding, our bodies will generate new fat cells well beyond puberty if we keep gaining weight. When our fat cells are full, they will both enlarge in size and increase in number.

Here is another example from this pubmed study: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879274/

In adults, fat cell number is constant over time in spite of a large turnover (about 10% of the fat cells per year) when body weight is stable. A decrease in body weight only changes fat cell size (becoming smaller), whereas an increase in body weight causes elevation of both fat cell size and number in adults.


The increase in size is bad for us, so ideally the more we can do to stimulate adipogensis, the more likely we are to be metabolically healthy while obese.

Also if you look at the wikipedia page for Lipotoxicity, you'll see that it's still undetermined whether or not Obesity is the cause.

The causative role of obesity in lipotoxicity is controversial. Some researchers claim that obesity has protective effects against lipotoxicity as it results in extra adipose tissue in which excess lipids can be stored.

MitchHedberg:
My personal theory is that when you combine weight gain with "healthy" behaviors like exercise, our bodies are move in the direction of adipogenesis over fat cell hypertorphy. However, I'm willing to bet that it's mostly determined by genetics and that you're only able to influence things to a certain degree.



Your genetics play a huge role. Yes, eating nutritiously and exercising help a lot. But some people tolerate things differently. I have seen people that are fine are very high body weights (400+) and others who can't gain without getting violently ill.
2 months

Number of fat cells

Bigwideland:
I have been reading up on the development of fat cells. Most articles conclude that you can increase the number of fat cells to about 23 or 24 but most in adolescents year's. These tend to be cells under the skin. These can increase is size without much metabolic risk.

Once you are over 25 your fat cell counts are mainly unchanged. So you can gain till you Max out your cell capacity with low metabolic issues. After that your increase in weight is in your organs like your liver ect. This can lead to diabetes and so on.

So that explains to some degree how some people get to huge size as adults they developed more cells as teenagers.

Do we have any expert's that can input on this.

And how, if true can you know you maxed out your fat cells capacity?


Not an expert, but the search term you’re looking for is “adipose tissue hyperplasia”—that means increasing the number of fat cells. Sometimes helps to include specifiers like “white adipose tissue hyperplasia” or “subcutaneous adipose tissue hyperplasia”. (“Hypertrophy” means filling up those fat cells)

There was a neat paper from… close to a decade ago? 2015 maybe? That used a mouse model to first induce obesity with a high fat diet, and then cure it by using a hormone cocktail to induce hyperplasia.

The mice gained weight after the cocktail, but the size of the cells was smaller; they reversed the hypertrophy by inducing hyperplasia, giving the mice more room to store fat (ie, there was somewhere for the blood sugar to go. No more systemic insulin resistance or diabetes).

These results seem consistent with some conclusions about “metabolically healthy obese” (MHO) humans, who typically have smaller and more plentiful fat cells.

A fairly comprehensive paper I read in… 2018? Addressed a lot of evidence that the systemic insulin resistance of T2DM is a result of fat cells becoming too hypertrophic and bursting, signaling to others to become insulin resistant.

I really do have to collect these papers in a sensible place at some point lol.
1 month

Number of fat cells

Bigwideland:
I have been reading up on the development of fat cells. Most articles conclude that you can increase the number of fat cells to about 23 or 24 but most in adolescents year's. These tend to be cells under the skin. These can increase is size without much metabolic risk.

Once you are over 25 your fat cell counts are mainly unchanged. So you can gain till you Max out your cell capacity with low metabolic issues. After that your increase in weight is in your organs like your liver ect. This can lead to diabetes and so on.

So that explains to some degree how some people get to huge size as adults they developed more cells as teenagers.

Do we have any expert's that can input on this.

And how, if true can you know you maxed out your fat cells capacity?

Greentrees8733:
Not an expert, but the search term you’re looking for is “adipose tissue hyperplasia”—that means increasing the number of fat cells. Sometimes helps to include specifiers like “white adipose tissue hyperplasia” or “subcutaneous adipose tissue hyperplasia”. (“Hypertrophy” means filling up those fat cells)

There was a neat paper from… close to a decade ago? 2015 maybe? That used a mouse model to first induce obesity with a high fat diet, and then cure it by using a hormone cocktail to induce hyperplasia.

The mice gained weight after the cocktail, but the size of the cells was smaller; they reversed the hypertrophy by inducing hyperplasia, giving the mice more room to store fat (ie, there was somewhere for the blood sugar to go. No more systemic insulin resistance or diabetes).

These results seem consistent with some conclusions about “metabolically healthy obese” (MHO) humans, who typically have smaller and more plentiful fat cells.

A fairly comprehensive paper I read in… 2018? Addressed a lot of evidence that the systemic insulin resistance of T2DM is a result of fat cells becoming too hypertrophic and bursting, signaling to others to become insulin resistant.

I really do have to collect these papers in a sensible place at some point lol.


Is this the paper you mentioned? onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/oby.20705

This whole conversation has me going down a rabbit hole of determining what causes hyperplasia over hypertrophy. lol
1 month

Number of fat cells

Yup! That's the one smiley
1 month
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