Adipocytes, also known as lipocytes and fat cells, are the cells that primarily compose adipose tissue, close-up view of cells.

Myoglobin Identified as a Key Regulator of the Body’s Energy-Burning Fat

HI-MAG

Researchers at Helmholtz Munich have discovered that myoglobin, a protein traditionally associated with oxygen storage in muscle, also plays an essential role in thermogenic fat. Led by PD Dr. John Heiker and Christian Strehlau from the Helmholtz Institute for Metabolic, Obesity and Vascular Research (HI-MAG), the study shows that myoglobin enables brown fat cells to efficiently burn lipids and maintain whole-body energy expenditure.

Using the first adipose tissue-specific myoglobin knockout mouse model, the team found that loss of myoglobin in fat tissue reduced energy expenditure, impaired cold adaptation, disrupted lipid metabolism, and markedly increased susceptibility to diet-induced obesity. Mechanistically, myoglobin was required for efficient fatty acid utilization and mitochondrial metabolism in thermogenic adipocytes. Importantly, restoring myoglobin expression in brown fat improved metabolic parameters and reduced weight gain in obese mice, while increasing myoglobin in human adipocytes enhanced fat breakdown and mitochondrial activity.

Original Publication

Strehlau C, Broghammer H, Gebhardt C, Hoffmann A, Hagemann T, Midilli Ş, Zimmer RS, Schubert K, Karagiannakou V, Georgiadi A, Ost M, Krüger M, Roth L, Krause K, Klöting N, Keller M, Wabitsch M, Nuwayhid R, Stimson RH, Stumvoll M, Blüher M, Weiner J, Heiker JT. 

Adipocyte Myoglobin Is a Determinant of Energy Expenditure and a Potential Target to Limit Obesity. 

Adv Sci (Weinh). 2026 Jun 25:e76191. doi: 10.1002/advs.76191.

MA-Foto John Heiker_freigestellt
PD Dr. Dr. John Heiker

Group Leader of Molecular Obesity Research, HI-MAG

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