
Dietary Calcium and Body Fat: Cause and Effect
As dietary calcium intake
increases, it acts at the cellular
level to alter energy metabolism
so that more food energy is
burned and less is stored as fat.
This is the conclusion of
researchers at the University of
Tennessee’s Department of
Nutrition who studied the effect of
dietary calcium levels in mice.
The mice were genetically
engineered to express a human
obesity gene called “agouti” in their fat cells, making them useful models for the
study of diet-induced obesity. The researchers, led by Michael B.
Zemel, Ph.D.,
director of the University’s Nutrition Institute, found support for their
conclusions in
data from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III),
which shows an inverse relationship between calcium and dairy intakes and body fat
in adults.
Prior research from the Nutrition Institute shows that the agouti gene stimulates an
increased flow of calcium into fat cells. This in turn liberates fatty
acids and
stimulates the activity of fatty acid synthase, an enzyme key to fat synthesis and
storage (see related article on page 1). At the same time, calcium influx inhibits fat
breakdown. The researchers suspected that hormones regulating calcium levels both
within and outside of cells were key to these processes, and that
dietary calcium
could influence hormone activity. They went on to test the hypothesis that a
low-calcium diet increases levels of circulating hormones, which in turn stimulate
calcium influx into fat cells and increase fat synthesis and storage. They speculated
that a high calcium diet could suppress hormonal activity and thereby
reduce fat
mass.
The researchers placed four groups of mice on low-calcium (0.4 percent), high-fat,
high-sucrose diets for 6 weeks. The basal group maintained the diet with no
changes; a high calcium group received the diet supplemented with calcium
carbonate to increase dietary calcium to 1.2 percent; a medium dairy group received
25 percent of its protein as non-fat dry milk with dietary calcium at 1.2 percent; and
a high dairy group received 50 percent of its protein from non-fat dry milk with a
dietary calcium level of 2.4 percent. After 6 weeks, the basal diet group
experienced
a weight gain of 24 percent. The high calcium group gained about 18 percent; the
medium dairy group, 17 percent; and the high dairy group, less than 15 percent.
These differences occurred despite all groups consuming the same quantity of food.
The researchers concluded that low calcium diets lead to increased fat storage and
higher calcium diets favor increased burning of fat. Dietary calcium in the form of
dairy had an even greater effect on reducing fat storage than a calcium supplement.
The authors propose that calcium in fat cells “is a logical target for
pharmacological
and/or nutritional regulation” of
overweight and obesity.
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