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Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice

Metabolic disease risk escalates following menopause. The mechanism is not fully known, but likely involves reduced signaling through estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), which is highly expressed in brown and white adipose tissue (BAT and WAT). Objective: Test the hypothesis that uncoupling protein (UCP1...

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Autores principales: Clookey, Stephanie L., Welly, Rebecca J., Shay, Dusti, Woodford, Makenzie L., Fritsche, Kevin L., Rector, R. Scott, Padilla, Jaume, Lubahn, Dennis B., Vieira-Potter, Victoria J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6371032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30804793
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00009
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author Clookey, Stephanie L.
Welly, Rebecca J.
Shay, Dusti
Woodford, Makenzie L.
Fritsche, Kevin L.
Rector, R. Scott
Padilla, Jaume
Lubahn, Dennis B.
Vieira-Potter, Victoria J.
author_facet Clookey, Stephanie L.
Welly, Rebecca J.
Shay, Dusti
Woodford, Makenzie L.
Fritsche, Kevin L.
Rector, R. Scott
Padilla, Jaume
Lubahn, Dennis B.
Vieira-Potter, Victoria J.
author_sort Clookey, Stephanie L.
collection PubMed
description Metabolic disease risk escalates following menopause. The mechanism is not fully known, but likely involves reduced signaling through estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), which is highly expressed in brown and white adipose tissue (BAT and WAT). Objective: Test the hypothesis that uncoupling protein (UCP1) activation mitigates metabolic dysfunction caused by loss of signaling through ERα. Methods: At 8 weeks of age, female ERα knock out (KO) and wild-type mice were housed at 28°C and fed a Western-style high-fat, high sucrose diet (HFD) or a normal low-fat chow diet (NC) for 10 weeks. During the final 2 weeks, they received daily injections of CL 316,256 (CL), a selective β3 adrenergic agonist, or vehicle control (CTRL), creating eight groups: WT-CTRL, WT-CL, KO-CTRL, and KO-CL on HFD or NC; n = 4–10/group. Results: ERαKO demonstrated exacerbated HFD-induced adiposity gain (P < 0.001) and insulin resistance (P = 0.006). CL treatment improved insulin sensitivity (P < 0.05) and normalized ERαKO-induced adiposity increase (P < 0.05). In both genotypes, CL increased resting energy expenditure (P < 0.05) and induced WAT beiging indicated by increased UCP1 protein in both perigonadal (PGAT) and subcutaneous (SQAT) depots. These effects were attenuated under HFD conditions (P < 0.05). In KO, CL reduced HFD energy consumption compared to CTRL (P < 0.05). Remarkably, CL increased WAT ERβ protein levels of both WT and KO (P < 0.001), revealing CL-mediated changes in estrogen signaling may have protective metabolic effects. Conclusion: CL completely restored metabolic dysfunction in ERαKO mice. Thus, UCP1 may be a therapeutic target for treating metabolic dysfunction following loss of estrogen receptor signaling.
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spelling pubmed-63710322019-02-25 Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice Clookey, Stephanie L. Welly, Rebecca J. Shay, Dusti Woodford, Makenzie L. Fritsche, Kevin L. Rector, R. Scott Padilla, Jaume Lubahn, Dennis B. Vieira-Potter, Victoria J. Front Physiol Physiology Metabolic disease risk escalates following menopause. The mechanism is not fully known, but likely involves reduced signaling through estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), which is highly expressed in brown and white adipose tissue (BAT and WAT). Objective: Test the hypothesis that uncoupling protein (UCP1) activation mitigates metabolic dysfunction caused by loss of signaling through ERα. Methods: At 8 weeks of age, female ERα knock out (KO) and wild-type mice were housed at 28°C and fed a Western-style high-fat, high sucrose diet (HFD) or a normal low-fat chow diet (NC) for 10 weeks. During the final 2 weeks, they received daily injections of CL 316,256 (CL), a selective β3 adrenergic agonist, or vehicle control (CTRL), creating eight groups: WT-CTRL, WT-CL, KO-CTRL, and KO-CL on HFD or NC; n = 4–10/group. Results: ERαKO demonstrated exacerbated HFD-induced adiposity gain (P < 0.001) and insulin resistance (P = 0.006). CL treatment improved insulin sensitivity (P < 0.05) and normalized ERαKO-induced adiposity increase (P < 0.05). In both genotypes, CL increased resting energy expenditure (P < 0.05) and induced WAT beiging indicated by increased UCP1 protein in both perigonadal (PGAT) and subcutaneous (SQAT) depots. These effects were attenuated under HFD conditions (P < 0.05). In KO, CL reduced HFD energy consumption compared to CTRL (P < 0.05). Remarkably, CL increased WAT ERβ protein levels of both WT and KO (P < 0.001), revealing CL-mediated changes in estrogen signaling may have protective metabolic effects. Conclusion: CL completely restored metabolic dysfunction in ERαKO mice. Thus, UCP1 may be a therapeutic target for treating metabolic dysfunction following loss of estrogen receptor signaling. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-02-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6371032/ /pubmed/30804793 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00009 Text en Copyright © 2019 Clookey, Welly, Shay, Woodford, Fritsche, Rector, Padilla, Lubahn and Vieira-Potter. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Clookey, Stephanie L.
Welly, Rebecca J.
Shay, Dusti
Woodford, Makenzie L.
Fritsche, Kevin L.
Rector, R. Scott
Padilla, Jaume
Lubahn, Dennis B.
Vieira-Potter, Victoria J.
Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice
title Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice
title_full Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice
title_fullStr Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice
title_full_unstemmed Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice
title_short Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor Activation Rescues Metabolic Dysfunction in Female Estrogen Receptor Alpha-Null Mice
title_sort beta 3 adrenergic receptor activation rescues metabolic dysfunction in female estrogen receptor alpha-null mice
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6371032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30804793
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00009
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