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1.
The bioenergetics of brown fat mitochondria isolated from UCP1-ablated mice were investigated. The mitochondria had lost the high GDP-binding capacity normally found in brown fat mitochondria, and they were innately in an energized state, in contrast to wild-type mitochondria. GDP, which led to energization of wild-type mitochondria, was without effect on the brown fat mitochondria from UCP1-ablated mice. The absence of thermogenic function did not result in reintroduction of high ATP synthase activity. Remarkably and unexpectedly, the mitochondria from UCP1-ablated mice were as sensitive to the de-energizing ("uncoupling") effect of free fatty acids as were UCP1-containing mitochondria. Therefore, the de-energizing effect of free fatty acids does not appear to be mediated via UCP1, and free fatty acids would not seem to be the intracellular physiological activator involved in mediation of the thermogenic signal from the adrenergic receptor to UCP1. In the UCP1-ablated mice, Ucp2 mRNA levels in brown adipose tissue were 14-fold higher and Ucp3 mRNA levels were marginally lower than in wild-type. The Ucp2 and Ucp3 mRNA levels were therefore among the highest found in any tissue. These high mRNA levels did not confer on the isolated mitochondria any properties associated with de-energization. Thus, the mere observation of a high level of Ucp2 or Ucp3 mRNA in a tissue cannot be taken as an indication that mitochondria isolated from that tissue will display innate de-energization or thermogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
Undecanesulfonate is transported by uncoupling protein-1. Its inability to induce H+ uniport with reconstituted uncoupling protein-1 supports fatty acid cycling hypothesis. Rial et al. [Rial, E., Aguirregoitia, E., Jimenez-Jimenez, J., & Ledesma, A. (2004). Alkylsulfonates activate the uncoupling protein UCP1: Implications for the transport mechanism. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1608, 122-130], have challenged the fatty acid cycling by observing uncoupling of brown adipose tissue mitochondria due to undecanesulfonate, interpreted as allosteric activation of uncoupling protein-1. We have estimated undecanesulfonate effects after elimination of endogenous fatty acids by carnitine cycle in the presence or absence of bovine serum albumin. We show that the undecanesulfonate effect is partly due to fatty acid release from albumin when undecanesulfonate releases bound fatty acid and partly represents a non-specific uncoupling protein-independent acceleration of respiration, since it proceeds also in rat heart mitochondria lacking uncoupling protein-1 and membrane potential is not decreased upon addition of undecanesulfonate without albumin. When the net fatty acid-induced uncoupling was assayed, the addition of undecanesulfonate even slightly inhibited the uncoupled respiration. We conclude that undecanesulfonate does not allosterically activate uncoupling protein-1 and that fatty acid cycling cannot be excluded on a basis of its non-specific effects.  相似文献   

3.
Brown fat is a thermogenic organ that allows newborns and small mammals to maintain a stable body temperature when exposed to cold. The heat generation capacity is based on the uncoupling of respiration from ATP synthesis mediated by the uncoupling protein UCP1. The first studies on the properties of these mitochondria revealed that fatty acid removal was an absolute prerequisite for respiratory control. Thus fatty acids, that are substrate for oxidation, were proposed as regulators of respiration. However, their ability to uncouple all types of mitochondria and the demonstration that several mitochondrial carriers catalyze the translocation of the fatty acid anion have made them unlikely candidates for a specific role in brown fat. Nevertheless, data strongly argue for a physiological function. First, fatty acids mimic the noradrenaline effects on adipocytes. Second, there exists a precise correlation between fatty acid sensitivity and the levels of UCP1. Finally, fatty acids increase the conductance by facilitating proton translocation, a mechanism that is distinct from the fatty acid uncoupling mediated by other mitochondrial carriers. The regulation of UCP1 and UCP2 by retinoids and the lack of effects of fatty acids on UCP2 or UCP3 are starting to set differences among the new uncoupling proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Mice having targeted inactivation of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) are cold sensitive but not obese (Enerb?ck S, Jacobsson A, Simpson EM, Guerra C, Yamashita H, Harper M-E, and Kozak LP. Nature 387: 90-94, 1997). Recently, we have shown that proton leak in brown adipose tissue (BAT) mitochondria from UCP1-deficient mice is insensitive to guanosine diphosphate (GDP), a well known inhibitor of UCP1 activity (Monemdjou S, Kozak LP, and Harper M-E. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 276: E1073-E1082, 1999). Moreover, despite a fivefold increase of UCP2 mRNA in BAT of UCP1-deficient mice, we found no differences in the overall kinetics of this GDP-insensitive proton leak between UCP1-deficient mice and controls. Based on these findings, which show no adaptive increase in UCP1-independent leak in BAT, we hypothesized that adaptive thermogenesis may be occurring in other tissues of the UCP1-deficient mouse (e.g., skeletal muscle), thus allowing them to maintain their normal resting metabolic rate, feed efficiency, and adiposity. Here, we report on the overall kinetics of the mitochondrial proton leak, respiratory chain, and ATP turnover in skeletal muscle mitochondria from UCP1-deficient and heterozygous control mice. Over a range of mitochondrial protonmotive force (Deltap) values, leak-dependent oxygen consumption is higher in UCP1-deficient mice compared with controls. State 4 (maximal leak-dependent) respiration rates are also significantly higher in the mitochondria of mice deficient in UCP1, whereas state 4 Deltap is significantly lower. No significant differences in state 3 respiration rates or Deltap values were detected between the two groups. Thus the altered kinetics of the mitochondrial proton leak in skeletal muscle of UCP1-deficient mice indicate a thermogenic mechanism favoring the lean phenotype of the UCP1-deficient mouse.  相似文献   

5.
White and brown adipocytes are usually located in distinct depots; however, in response to cold, brown adipocytes appear in white fat. This response is mediated by beta-adrenoceptors but there is a controversy about the subtype(s) involved. In the present study, we exposed to cold beta 3-adrenoceptor knockout mice (beta 3KO) on a C57BL/6J genetic background and measured in white adipose tissue the density of multilocular cells and the expression of the brown adipocyte marker uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1). In brown fat of beta 3KO mice, UCP1 expression levels were normal at 24 degrees C as well as after a 10-day cold exposure. Strikingly, under both conditions, in the white fat of beta 3KO mice the levels of UCP1 mRNA and protein as well as the density of multilocular cells were decreased. These results indicate that beta 3-adrenoceptors play a major role in the appearance of brown adipocytes in white fat and suggest that the brown adipocytes present in white fat differ from those in brown fat.  相似文献   

6.
In brown-fat mitochondria, fatty acids induce thermogenic uncoupling through activation of UCP1 (uncoupling protein 1). However, even in brown-fat mitochondria from UCP1-/- mice, fatty-acid-induced uncoupling exists. In the present investigation, we used the inhibitor CAtr (carboxyatractyloside) to examine the involvement of the ANT (adenine nucleotide translocator) in the mediation of this UCP1-independent fatty-acid-induced uncoupling in brown-fat mitochondria. We found that the contribution of ANT to fatty-acid-induced uncoupling in UCP1-/- brown-fat mitochondria was minimal (whereas it was responsible for nearly half the fatty-acid-induced uncoupling in liver mitochondria). As compared with liver mitochondria, brown-fat mitochondria exhibit a relatively high (UCP1-independent) basal respiration ('proton leak'). Unexpectedly, a large fraction of this high basal respiration was sensitive to CAtr, whereas in liver mitochondria, basal respiration was CAtr-insensitive. Total ANT protein levels were similar in brown-fat mitochondria from wild-type mice and in liver mitochondria, but the level was increased in brown-fat mitochondria from UCP1-/- mice. However, in liver, only Ant2 mRNA was found, whereas in brown adipose tissue, Ant1 and Ant2 mRNA levels were equal. The data are therefore compatible with a tentative model in which the ANT2 isoform mediates fatty-acid-induced uncoupling, whereas the ANT1 isoform may mediate a significant part of the high basal proton leak in brown-fat mitochondria.  相似文献   

7.
Toyomizu M  Ueda M  Sato S  Seki Y  Sato K  Akiba Y 《FEBS letters》2002,529(2-3):313-318
Although bird species studied thus far have no distinct brown adipose tissue (BAT) or a related thermogenic tissue, there is now strong evidence that non-shivering mechanisms in birds may play an important role during cold exposure. Recently, increased expression of the duckling homolog of the avian uncoupling protein (avUCP) was demonstrated in cold-acclimated ducklings [Raimbault et al., Biochem. J. 353 (2001) 441-444]. Among the mitochondrial anion carriers, roles for the ATP/ADP antiporter (ANT) as well as UCP variants in thermogenesis are proposed. The present experiments were conducted (i) to examine the effects of cold acclimation on the fatty acid-induced uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation in skeletal muscle mitochondria and (ii) to clone the cDNA of UCP and ANT homologs from chicken skeletal muscle and study differences compared to controls in expression levels of their mRNAs in the skeletal muscle of cold-acclimated chickens. The results obtained here show that suppression of palmitate-induced uncoupling by carboxyatractylate was greater in the subsarcolemmal skeletal muscle mitochondria from cold-acclimated chickens than that for control birds. An increase in mRNA levels of avANT and, to lesser degree, of avUCP in the skeletal muscle of cold-acclimated chickens was also found. Taken together, the present studies on cold-acclimated chickens suggest that the simultaneous increments in levels of avANT and avUCP mRNA expression may be involved in the regulation of thermogenesis in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

8.
The cloning of the uncoupling protein (UCP)1 homologs UCP2 and UCP3 has raised considerable interest in the mechanism. The expression of UCP3 mainly in skeletal muscle mitochondria and the potency of the skeletal muscle as a thermogenic organ made UCP3 an attractive target for studies toward manipulation of energy expenditure to fight disorders such as obesity and type 2 diabetes. Overexpressing UCP3 in mice resulted in lean, hyperphagic mice. However, the lack of an apparent phenotype in mice lacking UCP3 triggered the search for alternative functions of UCP3. The observation that fatty acid levels significantly affect UCP3 expression has given UCP3 a position in fatty acid handling and/or oxidation. Emerging data indicate that the primary physiological role of UCP3 may be the mitochondrial handling of fatty acids rather than the regulation of energy expenditure through thermogenesis. It has been proposed that UCP3 functions to export fatty acid anions away from the mitochondrial matrix. In doing so, fatty acids are exchanged with protons, explaining the uncoupling activity of UCP3. The exported fatty acid anions may originate from hydrolysis of fatty acid esters by a mitochondrial thioesterase, or they may have entered the mitochondria as nonesterified fatty acids by incorporating into and flip‐flopping across the mitochondrial inner membrane. Regardless of the origin of the fatty acid anions, this putative function of UCP3 might be of great importance in protecting mitochondria against fatty acid accumulation and may help to maintain muscular fat oxidative capacity.  相似文献   

9.
The function of uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) is still not established. Mitochondrial uncoupling, control of ROS production, protection against lipotoxicity and protection against oxidative stress are functions classically discussed. To establish a role for UCP3 in these functions, we have here used UCP3 (-/-) mice, backcrossed for 10 generations on a C57Bl/6 background. In isolated skeletal muscle mitochondria, we examined uncoupled respiration, both unstimulated and in the presence of fatty acids. We did not observe any difference between mitochondria from wildtype and UCP3 (-/-) mice. We measured H(2)O(2) production rate and respiration rate under reactive oxygen species-generating conditions (succinate without rotenone) but found no effect of UCP3. We tested two models of acute lipotoxicity-fatty acid-induced oxidative inhibition and fatty acid-induced swelling-but did not observe any protective effect of UCP3. We examined oxidative stress by quantifying 4-hydroxynonenal protein adducts and protein carbonyls in the mitochondria-but did not observe any protective effect of UCP3. We conclude that under the experimental conditions tested here, we find no evidence for the function of UCP3 being basal or induced uncoupling, regulation of ROS production, protection against acute lipotoxicity or protection against oxidative damage.  相似文献   

10.
The recruitment process induced by acclimation of mammals to cold includes a marked alteration in the acyl composition of the phospholipids of mitochondria from brown adipose tissue: increases in 18:0, 18:2(n-6), and 20:4(n-6) and decreases in 16:0, 16:1, 18:1, and 22:6(n-3). A basic question is whether these alterations are caused by changes in the concentration of uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1) or the thermogenesis it mediates-implying that they are secondary effects-or whether they are an integrated, independent part of the recruitment process. This question was addressed here using wild-type and UCP1-ablated C57BL/6 mice acclimated to 24 degrees C or 4 degrees C. In wild-type mice, the phospholipid fatty acyl composition of mitochondria from brown adipose tissue showed the changes in response to cold that were expected from observations in other species and strains. The changes were specific, as different changes occurred in skeletal muscle mitochondria. In UCP1-ablated mice, cold acclimation induced acyl alterations in brown adipose tissue that were qualitatively identical and quantitatively similar to those in wild-type mice. Therefore, neither the increased content of UCP1 nor mitochondrial uncoupling altered the effect of cold on acyl composition. Cold acclimation in wild-type mice had little effect on phospholipid acyl composition in muscle mitochondria, but cold-acclimation in UCP1-ablated mice caused significant alterations, probably due to sustained shivering. Thus, the alterations in brown adipose tissue phospholipid acyl composition are revealed to be an independent part of the recruitment process, and their functional significance for thermogenesis should be elucidated.  相似文献   

11.
Physiological role of mitochondrial uncoupling proteins UCP2 and UCP3, homologous to UCP1 from brown adipose tissue, is unclear. It was proposed recently that UCP2 and UCP3 are metabolic triggers that switch oxidation of glucose to oxidation of fatty acids, exporting pyruvate from mitochondria. In the present study we tried to verify this hypothesis using ground squirrels (Spermophilus undulatus), since expression of all UCPs in different tissues increases during winter season, and UCP1 is abundant in brown fat. We confirmed the possibility of nonspecific transport of pyruvate through UCP1 in brown fat mitochondria and tried to identify similar transport in liver and skeletal muscle mitochondria where UCP2 and UCP3 are expressed. Transport of pyruvate mediated by UCP1 in mitochondria of brown fat was observed using valinomycin-induced swelling of non-respiring mitochondria in 55 mM potassium pyruvate and was inhibited by GDP. In contrast, mitochondria of liver and skeletal muscles in similar conditions did not exhibit electrogenic transport of pyruvate anions that could be related to functioning of UCP2 and UCP3. At the same time, functioning of pyruvate carrier was detected in these mitochondria by nigericin-induced passive swelling or valinomycin-induced active swelling in potassium pyruvate that was inhibited by α-CHC, a specific inhibitor of the pyruvate carrier. Thus, our results suggest that in contrast to UCP1 of brown fat, UCP2 and UCP3 from intact liver and skeletal muscle mitochondria of winter active ground squirrels are unable to carry out pyruvate transport.  相似文献   

12.
The recently discovered uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) is highly homologous to the mitochondrialinner membrane protein UCP1, which generates heat by uncoupling the respiratory chainfrom oxidative phosphorylation. The thermogenic function of UCP1 protects against cold andregulates the energy balance in rodents. We review in vitro studies investigating the uncouplingactivity of UCP3 and in vivo studies, which address UCP3 gene expression in brown adiposetissue and skeletal muscle under various metabolic conditions. The data presented are, for themost, consistent with an uncoupling role for UCP3 in regulatory thermogenesis. We alsodiscuss mediators of UCP3 regulation and propose a potential role for intracellular fatty acidsin the mechanism of UCP3 modulation. Finally, we hypothesize a role for UCP3 in themetabolic adaptation of the mitochondria to the degradation of fatty acids.  相似文献   

13.
To examine the thermogenic significance of the classical uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1), the thermogenic potential of brown adipocytes isolated from UCP1-ablated mice was investigated. Ucp1(-/-) cells had a basal metabolic rate identical to wild-type; the mitochondria within them were coupled to the same degree. The response to norepinephrine in wild-type cells was robust ( approximately 10-fold increase in thermogenesis); Ucp1(-/-) cells only responded approximately 3% of this. Ucp1(-/-) cells were as potent as wild-type in norepinephrine-induced cAMP accumulation and lipolysis and had a similar mitochondrial respiratory complement. In wild-type cells, fatty acids induced a thermogenic response similar to norepinephrine, but fatty acids (and retinoate) were practically without effect in Ucp1(-/-) cells. It is concluded that no other adrenergically induced thermogenic mechanism exists in brown adipocytes except that mediated by UCP1 and that entopic expression of UCP1 does not lead to overt innate uncoupling, and it is suggested that fatty acids are transformed to an intracellular physiological activator of UCP1. High expression of UCP2 and UCP3 in the tissue was not associated with an overt innate highly uncoupled state of mitochondria within the cells, nor with an ability of norepinephrine or endo- or exogenous fatty acids to induce uncoupled respiration in the cells. Thus, UCP1 remains the only physiologically potent thermogenic uncoupling protein in these cells.  相似文献   

14.
The data of Cannon and co-workers on UCP1-ablated mice are interpreted assuming that UCP2 and UCP3 are involved in thermoregulation as fatty acid-dependent uncouplers although they are not sufficient, in the absence of UCP1, for long term maintenance of normal body temperature of mice after sudden and strong decrease in the ambient temperature. I would like to suggest that in brown fat of control mice, UCP1 is present in an amount higher than UCP2 and 3 and, therefore, is able to cause (a) some fatty acid-mediated decrease in proton motive force in resting state and, hence, (b) oxidation of CoQH2 to CoQ which is shown by Klingenberg and coworkers to be cofactor for UCPs. This results in strong uncoupling and thermogenesis mediated by UCP1, 2 and 3. In the UCP1-ablated mice, activity of UCP2 and 3 appears to be insufficient to induce CoQH2 oxidation in resting brown fat mitochondria, which results in hypothermia.  相似文献   

15.
Mice lacking the thermogenic mitochondrial membrane protein UCP1 (uncoupling protein 1) - and thus all heat production from brown adipose tissue - can still adapt to a cold environment (4 °C) if successively transferred to the cold. The mechanism behind this adaptation has not been clarified. To examine possible adaptive processes in the skeletal muscle, we isolated mitochondria from the hind limb muscles of cold-acclimated wild-type and UCP1(–/–) mice and examined their bioenergetic chracteristics. We observed a switch in metabolism, from carbohydrate towards lipid catabolism, and an increased total mitochondrial complement, with an increased total ATP production capacity. The UCP1(–/–) muscle mitochondria did not display a changed state-4 respiration rate (no uncoupling) and were less sensitive to the uncoupling effect of fatty acids than the wild-type mitochondria. The content of UCP3 was increased 3-4 fold, but despite this, endogenous superoxide could not invoke a higher proton leak, and the small inhibitory effect of GDP was unaltered, indicating that it was not mediated by UCP3. Double mutant mice (UCP1(–/–) plus superoxide dismutase 2-overexpression) were not more cold sensitive than UCP1(–/–), bringing into question an involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in activation of any alternative thermogenic mechanism. We conclude that there is no evidence for an involvement of UCP3 in basal, fatty-acid- or superoxide-stimulated oxygen consumption or in GDP sensitivity. The adaptations observed did not imply any direct alternative process for nonshivering thermogenesis but the adaptations observed would be congruent with adaptation to chronically enhanced muscle activity caused by incessant shivering in these mice.  相似文献   

16.
Fatty Acid Interaction with Mitochondrial Uncoupling Proteins   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The phenomena of fatty acid interaction with mitochondrial integral membrane proteins, namelyuncoupling proteins (UCPs), are reviewed to emphasize the fatty acid cycling mechanism thathas been suggested to explain the UCP function. Fatty acid-induced uncoupling is suggestedto serve in bioenergetic systems, to set the optimum efficiency, and to tune the degree ofcoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. Fatty acid interaction with the classic uncouplingprotein (UCP1) from mitochondria of thermogenic brown adipose tissue (BAT) is well known.UCP1 is considered to mediate purine nucleotide-sensitive uniport of monovalent unipolaranions, including anionic fatty acids. The return of protonated fatty acid leads to H+ uniportand uncoupling. Experiments supporting this mechanism are also reviewed for plant uncouplingmitochondrial protein (PUMP) and ADP/ATP carrier. The fatty acid cycling mechanism ispredicted, as well for the recently discovered uncoupling proteins, UCP2 and UCP3.  相似文献   

17.
We characterized the uncoupling activity of the plant uncoupling protein from Solanum tuberosum (StUCP) using mitochondria from intact potato tubers or from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) expressing the StUCP gene. Compared with mitochondria from transfected yeast, StUCP is present at very low levels in intact potato mitochondrial membranes (at least thirty times lower) as shown by immunodetection with anti-UCP1 antibodies. Under conditions that ruled out undesirable effects of nucleotides and free fatty acids on uncoupling activity measurement in plant mitochondria, the linoleic acid-induced depolarization in potato mitochondria was insensitive to the nucleotides ATP, GTP, or GDP. In addition, sensitivity to linoleic acid was similar in potato and in control yeast mitochondria, suggesting that uncoupling occurring in potato mitochondria was because of a UCP-independent proton diffusion process. By contrast, yeast mitochondria expressing StUCP exhibited a higher sensitivity to free fatty acids than those from the control yeast and especially a marked proton conductance in the presence of low amounts of linoleic acid. However, this fatty acid-induced uncoupling was also insensitive to nucleotides. Altogether, these results suggest that uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and heat production cannot be the dominant feature of StUCP expressed in native potato tissues. However, it could play a role in preventing reactive oxygen species production as proposed for mammalian UCP2 and UCP3.  相似文献   

18.
We tested the hypothesis that leptin, in addition to reducing body fat by restraining food intake, reduces body fat through a peripheral mechanism requiring uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1). Leptin was administered to wild-type (WT) mice and mice with a targeted disruption of the UCP1 gene (UCP1 deficient), while vehicle-injected control animals of each genotype were pair-fed to each leptin-treated group. Leptin reduced the size of white adipose tissue (WAT) depots in WT mice but not in UCP1-deficient animals. This was accompanied by a threefold increase in the amount of UCP1 protein and mRNA in the brown adipose tissue (BAT) of WT mice. Leptin also increased UCP2 mRNA in WAT of both WT and UCP1-deficient mice but increased UCP2 and UCP3 mRNA only in BAT from UCP1-deficient mice. These results indicate that leptin reduces WAT through a peripheral mechanism requiring the presence of UCP1, with little or no involvement of UCP2 or UCP3.  相似文献   

19.
Brown adipocytes are multilocular lipid storage cells that play a crucial role in non-shivering thermogenesis. These cells are located in brown adipose tissue (BAT) depots which are found in abundance in small mammals as well as in newborns of larger mammals, including humans. Brown adipocytes comprise a very large number of mitochondria packed with cristae and are densely innervated by the sympathetic nervous system (SNS). Sympathetic nerve endings release noradrenaline (NA) in the proximity of brown fat cells, where noradrenaline activates G-protein-coupled beta-adrenergic receptors (AR) and by doing so initiates a cascade of metabolic events culminating in the activation of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1). Uncoupling protein 1 is a unique feature of brown adipocytes that allows for the generation of heat upon sympathetic nervous system stimulation. It is found in the inner membrane of the mitochondrion, where uncoupling protein 1 uncouples the oxidation of fuel from adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. The expression of uncoupling protein 1 is strongly induced by cold exposure, revealing the importance of this uncoupling protein in thermoregulation. The thermoregulatory role of uncoupling protein 1 has been emphasized in uncoupling protein 1-deficient mice, whose resistance to cold is impaired. Uncoupling protein 1 expression is modulated by diet and metabolic hormones such as leptin and glucocorticoids, which suggests that the protein is a player in energy balance regulation.  相似文献   

20.
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