The brown fat-specific mitochondrial uncoupling protein (UCP) provides a mechanism for generating heat by uncoupling respiration and oxidative phosphorylation. It has been suggested that this system of thermogenesis can provide a defense against obesity. To test this idea, we created a transgenic mouse in which the fat-specific aP2 gene promoter directed Ucp expression in white fat and provided for the constitutive expression of Ucp in brown fat. Transgenic mice showed both Ucp mRNA and immunoreactive UCP in white fat at 2-10% the level normally measured in brown fat. A reduction in subcutaneous fat of aP2-Ucp C57BL/6J mice was observed at 3 mo of age. When the transgene was expressed in A(vy) genetically obese mice reductions in total body weight and subcutaneous fat stores were observed. Female transgenic A(vy) mice at 13 mo of age weighed 35 grams, a weight indistinguishable from nontransgenic C57BL/6J mice. Gonadal fat showed an increase in a novel adipocyte derivative that did not accumulate lipids and that constituted ~ 80% of the mass of the tissue in A(vy) transgenic. A major effect of aP2-Ucp in brown fat was to reduce endogenous gene expression by as much as 95%. The results suggest that UCP synthesized from the aP2 gene promoter is thermogenically active and capable of reducing fat stores.
CITATION STYLE
Kopecky, J., Clarke, G., Enerbäck, S., Spiegelman, B., & Kozak, L. P. (1995). Expression of the mitochondrial uncoupling protein gene from the aP2 gene promoter prevents genetic obesity. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 96(6), 2914–2923. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI118363
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.