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Alternatively activated macrophages produce catecholamines to sustain adaptive thermogenesis

All homeotherms utilize thermogenesis to maintain core body temperature, ensuring that cellular functions and physiologic processes can ensue in cold environments(1-3). In the prevailing model, when the hypothalamus senses cold temperatures, it triggers sympathetic discharge, resulting in the releas...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nguyen, Khoa D., Qiu, Yifu, Cui, Xiaojin, Goh, Y.P. Sharon, Mwangi, Julia, David, Tovo, Mukundan, Lata, Brombacher, Frank, Locksley, Richard M., Chawla, Ajay
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3371761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22101429
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature10653
Descripción
Sumario:All homeotherms utilize thermogenesis to maintain core body temperature, ensuring that cellular functions and physiologic processes can ensue in cold environments(1-3). In the prevailing model, when the hypothalamus senses cold temperatures, it triggers sympathetic discharge, resulting in the release of noradrenaline in brown adipose tissue (BAT) and white adipose tissue (WAT)(4,5). Acting via the β3-adrenergic receptors, noradrenaline induces lipolysis in white adipocytes(6), whereas it stimulates the expression of thermogenic genes, such as PPARγ coactivator 1a (Ppargc1a), uncoupling protein 1 (Ucp1), and acyl-CoA synthetase long-chain family member 1 (Acsl1), in brown adipocytes(7-9). However, the precise nature of all the cell types involved in this efferent loop is not well established. Here we report an unexpected requirement for the interleukin 4 (IL4)-stimulated program of alternative macrophage activation in adaptive thermogenesis. Cold exposure rapidly promoted alternative activation of adipose tissue macrophages, which secrete catecholamines to induce thermogenic gene expression in BAT and lipolysis in WAT. Absence of alternatively activated macrophages impaired metabolic adaptations to cold, whereas administration of IL4 increased thermogenic gene expression, fatty acid mobilization, and energy expenditure, all in a macrophage-dependent manner. We have thus discovered a surprising role for alternatively activated macrophages in the orchestration of an important mammalian stress response, the response to cold.