Brown fat is essential for cold-induced thermogenesis but not for obesity resistance in aP2-Ucp mice

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Abstract

The role of brown adipose tissue in total energy balance and cold- induced thermogenesis was studied. Mice expressing mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 (UCP-1) from the fat-specific aP2 gene promoter (heterozygous and homozygous aP2-Ucp transgenic mice) and their nontransgenic C57BL6/J littermates were used. The transgenic animals are resistant to obesity induced by a high-fat diet, presumably due to ectopic synthesis of UCP-1 in white fat. These animals exhibited atrophy of brown adipose tissue, as indicated by smaller size of brown fat and reduction of its total UCP-1 and DNA contents. Norepinephrine-induced respiration (measured in pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized animals) was decreased proportionally to the dosage of the transgene, and the homozygous (but not heterozygous) transgenic mice exhibited a reduction in their capacity to maintain body temperature in the cold. Our results indicate that the role of brown fat in cold-induced thermogenesis cannot be substituted by increased energy expenditure in other tissues.

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Štefl, B., Janovská, A., Hodný, Z., Rossmeisl, M., Horáková, M., Syrový, I., … Kopecký, J. (1998). Brown fat is essential for cold-induced thermogenesis but not for obesity resistance in aP2-Ucp mice. American Journal of Physiology - Endocrinology and Metabolism, 274(3 37-3). https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.1998.274.3.e527

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