DOI: 10.3390/onco6030031 ISSN: 2673-7523

Obesity as a Whole-Body Regulatory Disorder: A Systems Biology Framework for Metaflammation, Accelerated Aging, and Colorectal Cancer Risk

Gaurav Dutta, Priyanka Mishra, Sidharth P. Mishra, Jhasketan Badhai

Obesity is increasingly recognized as a complex systemic disorder rather than a simple consequence of excess energy intake and fat accumulation. This review presents a systems biology framework that examines how obesity-driven disruption of inter-organ communication networks contributes to chronic disease susceptibility, with particular emphasis on colorectal cancer (CRC). Disrupted signaling among the brain, adipose tissue, liver, skeletal muscle, gut, and immune system generates maladaptive feedback loops that promote chronic metabolic inflammation (metaflammation), loss of physiological resilience, and progressive metabolic dysfunction. Within this framework, obesity is redefined as a network disease characterized by neuroendocrine dysregulation, adipose tissue remodeling, immune dysfunction, impaired organ crosstalk, and alterations in the gut microbiome. A central feature of this dysregulation is persistent low-grade inflammation driven by immune-metabolic reprogramming and sustained activation of inflammatory pathways. Obesity-associated metaflammation is further linked to accelerated biological aging through mechanisms involving cellular senescence, mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and impaired metabolic resilience. These interconnected processes create a tumor-promoting environment by enhancing oncogenic signaling, disrupting intestinal barrier integrity, altering microbial and metabolic signaling, impairing immune surveillance, and promoting epithelial dysfunction, thereby increasing susceptibility to CRC. The review also examines how behavioral, circadian, environmental, and socioeconomic factors influence metabolic health and cancer risk. Finally, emerging translational opportunities, including biomarker-guided risk stratification, precision prevention, metabolic network restoration, and integrative lifestyle and pharmacological interventions, are discussed. Collectively, this review reframes obesity as a whole-body regulatory disorder and provides an integrated conceptual framework linking metabolism, inflammation, aging, and colorectal carcinogenesis to inform future prevention and therapeutic strategies.

More from our Archive