Cold-acclimated mice (including UCP1 knockout mice, obesogenic strains, and obesity-resistant strains) and their isolated mitochondria from inguinal white adipose tissue and interscapular brown adipose tissue.
UCP1 protein levels and UCP1-dependent thermogenesis (oxygen consumption per g tissue)surrogate
UCP1 in brite/beige adipose tissue mitochondria is thermogenically functional, but classical brown adipose tissue still predominates in total thermogenesis.
The phenomenon of white fat "browning," in which certain white adipose tissue depots significantly increase gene expression for the uncoupling protein UCP1 and thus supposedly acquire thermogenic, fat-burning properties, has attracted considerable attention. Because the mRNA increases are from very low initial levels, the metabolic relevance of the change is unclear: is the UCP1 protein thermogenically competent in these brite/beige-fat mitochondria? We found that, in mitochondria isolated from the inguinal "white" adipose depot of cold-acclimated mice, UCP1 protein levels almost reached those in brown-fat mitochondria. The UCP1 was thermogenically functional, in that these mitochondria exhibited UCP1-dependent thermogenesis with lipid or carbohydrate substrates with canonical guanosine diphosphate (GDP) sensitivity and loss of thermogenesis in UCP1 knockout (KO) mice. Obesogenic mouse strains had a lower thermogenic potential than obesity-resistant strains. The thermogenic density (UCP1-dependent oxygen consumption per g tissue) of inguinal white adipose tissue was maximally one-fifth of interscapular brown adipose tissue, and the total quantitative contribution of all inguinal mitochondria was maximally one-third of all interscapular brown-fat mitochondria, indicating that the classical brown adipose tissue depots would still predominate in thermogenesis.
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Irina G. Shabalina
Stockholm University
Nataša Petrovič
Stockholm University
Jasper M. A. de Jong
Atrogi (Sweden)
Cell Reports
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Stockholm University
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Shabalina et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dae1b11e19c8ae08835bbf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2013.10.044