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Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue

Therapeutic activation of thermogenic brown adipose tissue (BAT) may be feasible to prevent, or treat, cardiometabolic disease. However, rodents are commonly housed below thermoneutrality (~20 °C) which can modulate their metabolism and physiology including the hyperactivation of brown (BAT) and bei...

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Autores principales: Aldiss, Peter, Lewis, Jo E., Lupini, Irene, Bloor, Ian, Chavoshinejad, Ramyar, Boocock, David J., Miles, Amanda K., Ebling, Francis J. P., Budge, Helen, Symonds, Michael E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8836787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35163791
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23031869
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author Aldiss, Peter
Lewis, Jo E.
Lupini, Irene
Bloor, Ian
Chavoshinejad, Ramyar
Boocock, David J.
Miles, Amanda K.
Ebling, Francis J. P.
Budge, Helen
Symonds, Michael E.
author_facet Aldiss, Peter
Lewis, Jo E.
Lupini, Irene
Bloor, Ian
Chavoshinejad, Ramyar
Boocock, David J.
Miles, Amanda K.
Ebling, Francis J. P.
Budge, Helen
Symonds, Michael E.
author_sort Aldiss, Peter
collection PubMed
description Therapeutic activation of thermogenic brown adipose tissue (BAT) may be feasible to prevent, or treat, cardiometabolic disease. However, rodents are commonly housed below thermoneutrality (~20 °C) which can modulate their metabolism and physiology including the hyperactivation of brown (BAT) and beige white adipose tissue. We housed animals at thermoneutrality from weaning to chronically supress BAT, mimic human physiology and explore the efficacy of chronic, mild cold exposure (20 °C) and β3-adrenoreceptor agonism (YM-178) under these conditions. Using metabolic phenotyping and exploratory proteomics we show that transfer from 28 °C to 20 °C drives weight gain and a 125% increase in subcutaneous fat mass, an effect not seen with YM-178 administration, thus suggesting a direct effect of a cool ambient temperature in promoting weight gain and further adiposity in obese rats. Following chronic suppression of BAT, uncoupling protein 1 mRNA was undetectable in the subcutaneous inguinal white adipose tissue (IWAT) in all groups. Using exploratory adipose tissue proteomics, we reveal novel gene ontology terms associated with cold-induced weight gain in BAT and IWAT whilst Reactome pathway analysis highlights the regulation of mitotic (i.e., G2/M transition) and metabolism of amino acids and derivatives pathways. Conversely, YM-178 had minimal metabolic-related effects but modified pathways involved in proteolysis (i.e., eukaryotic translation initiation) and RNA surveillance across both tissues. Taken together these findings are indicative of a novel mechanism whereby animals increase body weight and fat mass following chronic suppression of adaptive thermogenesis from weaning. In addition, treatment with a B3-adrenoreceptor agonist did not improve metabolic health in obese animals raised at thermoneutrality.
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spelling pubmed-88367872022-02-12 Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue Aldiss, Peter Lewis, Jo E. Lupini, Irene Bloor, Ian Chavoshinejad, Ramyar Boocock, David J. Miles, Amanda K. Ebling, Francis J. P. Budge, Helen Symonds, Michael E. Int J Mol Sci Article Therapeutic activation of thermogenic brown adipose tissue (BAT) may be feasible to prevent, or treat, cardiometabolic disease. However, rodents are commonly housed below thermoneutrality (~20 °C) which can modulate their metabolism and physiology including the hyperactivation of brown (BAT) and beige white adipose tissue. We housed animals at thermoneutrality from weaning to chronically supress BAT, mimic human physiology and explore the efficacy of chronic, mild cold exposure (20 °C) and β3-adrenoreceptor agonism (YM-178) under these conditions. Using metabolic phenotyping and exploratory proteomics we show that transfer from 28 °C to 20 °C drives weight gain and a 125% increase in subcutaneous fat mass, an effect not seen with YM-178 administration, thus suggesting a direct effect of a cool ambient temperature in promoting weight gain and further adiposity in obese rats. Following chronic suppression of BAT, uncoupling protein 1 mRNA was undetectable in the subcutaneous inguinal white adipose tissue (IWAT) in all groups. Using exploratory adipose tissue proteomics, we reveal novel gene ontology terms associated with cold-induced weight gain in BAT and IWAT whilst Reactome pathway analysis highlights the regulation of mitotic (i.e., G2/M transition) and metabolism of amino acids and derivatives pathways. Conversely, YM-178 had minimal metabolic-related effects but modified pathways involved in proteolysis (i.e., eukaryotic translation initiation) and RNA surveillance across both tissues. Taken together these findings are indicative of a novel mechanism whereby animals increase body weight and fat mass following chronic suppression of adaptive thermogenesis from weaning. In addition, treatment with a B3-adrenoreceptor agonist did not improve metabolic health in obese animals raised at thermoneutrality. MDPI 2022-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8836787/ /pubmed/35163791 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23031869 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Aldiss, Peter
Lewis, Jo E.
Lupini, Irene
Bloor, Ian
Chavoshinejad, Ramyar
Boocock, David J.
Miles, Amanda K.
Ebling, Francis J. P.
Budge, Helen
Symonds, Michael E.
Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue
title Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue
title_full Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue
title_fullStr Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue
title_full_unstemmed Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue
title_short Cold Exposure Drives Weight Gain and Adiposity following Chronic Suppression of Brown Adipose Tissue
title_sort cold exposure drives weight gain and adiposity following chronic suppression of brown adipose tissue
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8836787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35163791
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23031869
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