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1.
The discovery of the human homologue of the thermogenic protein UCP1, named uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3), boosted research on the role of this skeletal muscle protein in energy metabolism and body weight regulation. Nowadays, 9 years after its discovery emerging data indicate that the primary physiological role of UCP3 may be the mitochondrial handling of fatty acids rather than regulating energy expenditure via thermogenesis. UCP3 has been proposed to export fatty acid anions or fatty acid peroxides away from the matrix-side of the mitochondrial inner membrane to prevent their deleterious accumulation. In this way, UCP3 could protect mitochondria against lipid-induced oxidative mitochondrial damage, a function especially important under conditions of high fatty acid supply to skeletal muscle mitochondria. Such function may be clinically relevant in the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus, a condition characterized by muscular fat accumulation, mitochondrial damage and low levels of UCP3.  相似文献   

2.
Energy metabolism in uncoupling protein 3 gene knockout mice   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
Uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) is a member of the mitochondrial anion carrier superfamily. Based upon its high homology with UCP1 and its restricted tissue distribution to skeletal muscle and brown adipose tissue, UCP3 has been suggested to play important roles in regulating energy expenditure, body weight, and thermoregulation. Other postulated roles for UCP3 include regulation of fatty acid metabolism, adaptive responses to acute exercise and starvation, and prevention of reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation. To address these questions, we have generated mice lacking UCP3 (UCP3 knockout (KO) mice). Here, we provide evidence that skeletal muscle mitochondria lacking UCP3 are more coupled (i.e. increased state 3/state 4 ratio), indicating that UCP3 has uncoupling activity. In addition, production of ROS is increased in mitochondria lacking UCP3. This study demonstrates that UCP3 has uncoupling activity and that its absence may lead to increased production of ROS. Despite these effects on mitochondrial function, UCP3 does not seem to be required for body weight regulation, exercise tolerance, fatty acid oxidation, or cold-induced thermogenesis. The absence of such phenotypes in UCP3 KO mice could not be attributed to up-regulation of other UCP mRNAs. However, alternative compensatory mechanisms cannot be excluded. The consequence of increased mitochondrial coupling in UCP3 KO mice on metabolism and the possible role of yet unidentified compensatory mechanisms, remains to be determined.  相似文献   

3.
Objective: The objective of this study is to test the impact of high‐fat diet (HFD) feeding on skeletal muscle (SM) uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) expression and its association with mitochondrial ion permeability and whole‐body energy homeostasis. Research Methods and Procedures: Sprague–Dawley rats were fed ad libitum either a HFD (60% of energy from fat, n = 6) or a low‐fat diet (12% of energy from fat, n = 6) for 4 weeks. Twenty‐four‐hour energy expenditure was measured by indirect calorimetry in the last week of the dietary treatment. Blood samples were collected for plasma leptin and free fatty acid assays, and mitochondria were isolated from hindlimb SM for subsequent determinations of UCP3 levels and mitochondrial ion permeability. Results: Plasma leptin levels were higher in rats fed the HFD despite the same body weight in two groups. The same dietary treatment also rendered a 2‐fold increase in plasma free fatty acid and SM UCP3 protein levels (Western blot) compared with the group fed the low‐fat diet. However, the elevated UCP3 protein levels did not correlate with mitochondrial swelling rates, a measure of mitochondrial chloride, and proton permeability, or with 24‐hour energy expenditure. Discussion: The high correlation between the levels of plasma free fatty acid levels and SM UCP3 suggests that circulating free fatty acid may play an important role in UCP3 expression during the HFD feeding. However, the dissociation between the UCP3 protein levels and 24‐hour energy expenditure as well as mitochondrial ion permeability suggests that mitochondrial proton leak mediated by muscle UCP3 may not be a major contributor in energy balance in HFD feeding, and other regulatory mechanisms independent of gene regulation may be responsible for the control of UCP3‐mediated uncoupling activity.  相似文献   

4.
Thyroid hormones have long been known to stimulate energy expenditure partly via loss of metabolic efficiency. The mechanism underlying the loss in metabolic efficiency observed, however, is not yet understood. An important candidate gene responsible for thyroid hormone induced thermogenesis was identified in 1997 with the discovery of skeletal muscle-uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3), a protein with approximately 60 % homology to the brown adipose tissue uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1). This short review summarizes our presentation held at the 'Thyroid and Sports' meeting; it does not aim to provide a concise overview of the available literature at this topic. Although induction of the UCP3 gene and increased protein expression during hyperthyroidism has been shown, there are no convincing data that increased UCP3 levels account for the increase in thermogenesis in the hyperthyroid state in humans. In contrast to cell and animal studies using ectopic overexpression of UCP3 as a model, induction of UCP3 in humans does not result in any apparent mitochondrial uncoupling. Hence, the primary physiological role of UCP3 may not be mitochondrial uncoupling, but uncoupling may occur as a side effect of a more pivotal role played by UCP3. Recently, UCP3 has been hypothesized to export fatty acid anions and/or lipid peroxides away from the mitochondrial matrix to prevent mitochondria from the harmful effects of peroxidized lipids. The present review aims to provide an overview of studies testing the feasibility of this unconventional function of UCP3.  相似文献   

5.
Rats bearing the Yoshida AH-130 ascites hepatoma showed an increased expression of both uncoupling protein-2 (UCP2) (two-fold) and UCP3 (three- to four-fold) in skeletal muscle (both soleus and gastrocnemius). The increase in mRNA content was associated with increased circulating concentrations of fatty acids (two-fold), triglyceride (two-fold) and cholesterol (1.9-fold). Administration of nicotinic acid to tumor-bearing rats abolishes the hyperlipidemic increase associated with tumor burden. The vitamin treatment also resulted in a decreased UCP3 gene expression in soleus muscle but not in gastrocnemius. It is concluded that circulating fatty acids may be involved in the regulation of UCP3 gene expression in aerobic muscles during experimental cancer cachexia. Since the UCP3 protein could have a role in energy expenditure, it may be suggested that hypolipidemic agents may have a beneficial role in the treatment of the cachectic syndrome.  相似文献   

6.
Darren A. Talbot 《BBA》2005,1709(2):150-156
Mitochondrial uncoupling proteins only catalyse proton transport when they are activated. Activators include superoxide and reactive alkenals, suggesting new physiological functions for UCP2 and UCP3: their activation by superoxide when protonmotive force is high causes mild uncoupling, which lowers protonmotive force and attenuates superoxide generation by the electron transport chain. This feedback loop acts to prevent excessive mitochondrial superoxide production. Superoxide inactivates aconitase in the mitochondrial matrix, so aconitase activity provides a sensitive measure of the effects of UCPs on matrix superoxide. We find that inhibition of UCP3 in isolated skeletal muscle mitochondria by GDP decreases aconitase activity by 25% after 20 min incubation. The GDP effect is absent in skeletal muscle mitochondria from UCP3 knockout mice, showing that it is mediated by UCP3. Protection of aconitase by UCP3 in the absence of nucleotides does not require added fatty acids. The purine nucleoside diphosphates and triphosphates cause aconitase inactivation, but the monophosphates and CDP do not, consistent with the known nucleotide specificity of UCP3. The IC50 for GDP is about 100 μM. These findings support the proposal that UCP3 attenuates endogenous radical production by the mitochondrial electron transport chain at high protonmotive force.  相似文献   

7.
Mitochondrial uncoupling proteins only catalyse proton transport when they are activated. Activators include superoxide and reactive alkenals, suggesting new physiological functions for UCP2 and UCP3: their activation by superoxide when protonmotive force is high causes mild uncoupling, which lowers protonmotive force and attenuates superoxide generation by the electron transport chain. This feedback loop acts to prevent excessive mitochondrial superoxide production. Superoxide inactivates aconitase in the mitochondrial matrix, so aconitase activity provides a sensitive measure of the effects of UCPs on matrix superoxide. We find that inhibition of UCP3 in isolated skeletal muscle mitochondria by GDP decreases aconitase activity by 25% after 20 min incubation. The GDP effect is absent in skeletal muscle mitochondria from UCP3 knockout mice, showing that it is mediated by UCP3. Protection of aconitase by UCP3 in the absence of nucleotides does not require added fatty acids. The purine nucleoside diphosphates and triphosphates cause aconitase inactivation, but the monophosphates and CDP do not, consistent with the known nucleotide specificity of UCP3. The IC(50) for GDP is about 100 microM. These findings support the proposal that UCP3 attenuates endogenous radical production by the mitochondrial electron transport chain at high protonmotive force.  相似文献   

8.
Mitochondrial uncoupling protein 3 (UCP(3))-mediated uncoupling has been postulated to depend on several factors, including superoxides, free fatty acids (FFAs), and fatty acid hydroperoxides and/or their derivatives. We investigated whether there is an interrelation between endogenous mitochondrial superoxides and fatty acids in inducing skeletal muscle mitochondrial uncoupling, and we speculated on the possible involvement of UCP(3) in this process. In the absence of FFAs, no differences in proton-leak kinetic were detected between succinate-energized mitochondria respiring in the absence or presence of rotenone, despite a large difference in complex I superoxide production. The addition of either arachidic acid or arachidonic acid induced an increase in proton-leak kinetic, with arachidonic acid having the more marked effect. The uncoupling effect of arachidic acid was independent of the presence of GDP, rotenone and vitamin E, while that of arachidonic acid was dependent on these factors. These data demonstrate that FFA and O(2-) play interrelated roles in inducing mitochondrial uncoupling, and we hypothesize that a likely formation of mitochondrial fatty acid hydroperoxides is a key event in the arachidonic acid-induced GDP-dependent inhibition of mitochondrial uncoupling.  相似文献   

9.
Uncoupling protein-3 (UCP3) is a mitochondrial inner membrane protein expressed most abundantly in skeletal muscle and to a lesser extent in heart and brown adipose tissue. Evidence supports a role for UCP3 in fatty acid oxidation (FAO); however, the underlying mechanism has not been explored. In 2001 we proposed a role for UCP3 in fatty acid export, leading to higher FAO rates (Himms-Hagen, J., and Harper, M. E. (2001) Exp. Biol. Med. (Maywood) 226, 78-84). Specifically, this widely held hypothesis states that during elevated FAO rates, UCP3 exports fatty acid anions, thereby maintaining mitochondrial co-enzyme A availability; reactivation of exported fatty acid anions would ultimately enable increased FAO. Here we tested mechanistic aspects of this hypothesis as well as its functional implications, namely increased FAO rates. Using complementary mechanistic approaches in mitochondria from wild-type and Ucp3(-)(/)(-) mice, we find that UCP3 is not required for FAO regardless of substrate type or supply rate covering a 20-fold range. Fatty acid anion export and reoxidation during elevated FAO, although present in skeletal muscle mitochondria, are independent of UCP3 abundance. Interestingly, UCP3 was found to be necessary for the fasting-induced enhancement of FAO rate and capacity, possibly via mitigated mitochondrial oxidative stress. Thus, although our observations indicate that UCP3 can impact FAO rates, the mechanistic basis is not via an integral function for UCP3 in the FAO machinery. Overall our data indicate a function for UCP3 in mitochondrial adaptation to perturbed cellular energy balance and integrate previous observations that have linked UCP3 to reduced oxidative stress and FAO.  相似文献   

10.
Mice overexpressing human UCP-3 in skeletal muscle (UCP-3tg) are lean despite overeating, have increased metabolic rate, and their skeletal muscle mitochondria show increased proton conductance. The true function of UCP-3 however, has yet to be determined. It is assumed that UCP-3tg mice have increased fatty acid beta-oxidation to fuel their increased metabolic rate. In this study we have quantified skeletal muscle mRNA levels of a number of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism. mRNA levels of uncoupling protein-2, carnitine palmitoyl transferase-1beta and fatty acid binding proteins, and transporters were unchanged when compared to wild-type mice. Lipoprotein lipase mRNA was slightly, but significantly, increased by 50%. The most notable change in gene expression was a threefold increase in mitochondrial thioesterase (MTE-1) expression. In the face of a chronic increase in mitochondrial uncoupling these changes suggest that increased flux of fatty acids through the beta-oxidation pathway does not necessarily require marked changes in expression of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism. The large increase in MTE-1 both confirms the importance of this gene in situations where mitochondrial beta-oxidation is increased and supports the hypothesis that UCP-3 exports fatty acids generated by MTE-1 in the mitochondrion.  相似文献   

11.
This study deals with mitochondrial energy efficiency in liver and skeletal muscle mitochondria in 15 days cold exposed rats. Cold exposure strongly increases the sensitivity to uncoupling by added palmitate of skeletal muscle but not liver mitochondria, while mitochondrial energy coupling in the absence of fatty acids is only slightly affected by cold in liver and skeletal muscle. In addition, uncoupling protein 3 content does not follow changes in skeletal muscle mitochondrial coupling. It is therefore concluded that skeletal muscle could play a direct thermogenic role based on fatty acid-induced mild uncoupling of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.  相似文献   

12.
The ability of native uncoupling protein-3 (UCP3) to uncouple mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is controversial. We measured the expression level of UCP3 and the proton conductance of skeletal muscle mitochondria isolated from transgenic mice overexpressing human UCP3 (UCP3-tg) and from UCP3 knockout (UCP3-KO) mice. The concentration of UCP3 in UCP3-tg mitochondria was approximately 3 microg/mg protein, approximately 20-fold higher than the wild type value. UCP3-tg mitochondria had increased nonphosphorylating respiration rates, decreased respiratory control, and approximately 4-fold increased proton conductance compared with the wild type. However, this increased uncoupling in UCP3-tg mitochondria was not caused by native function of UCP3 because it was not proportional to the increase in UCP3 concentration and was neither activated by superoxide nor inhibited by GDP. UCP3 was undetectable in mitochondria from UCP3-KO mice. Nevertheless, UCP3-KO mitochondria had unchanged respiration rates, respiratory control ratios, and proton conductance compared with the wild type under a variety of assay conditions. We conclude that uncoupling in UCP3-tg mice is an artifact of transgenic expression, and that UCP3 does not catalyze the basal proton conductance of skeletal muscle mitochondria in the absence of activators such as superoxide.  相似文献   

13.
Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction are associated with disease and aging. Oxidative stress results from overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), often leading to peroxidation of membrane phospholipids and production of reactive aldehydes, particularly 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. Mild uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation protects by decreasing mitochondrial ROS production. We find that hydroxynonenal and structurally related compounds (such as trans-retinoic acid, trans-retinal and other 2-alkenals) specifically induce uncoupling of mitochondria through the uncoupling proteins UCP1, UCP2 and UCP3 and the adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT). Hydroxynonenal-induced uncoupling was inhibited by potent inhibitors of ANT (carboxyatractylate and bongkrekate) and UCP (GDP). The GDP-sensitive proton conductance induced by hydroxynonenal correlated with tissue expression of UCPs, appeared in yeast mitochondria expressing UCP1 and was absent in skeletal muscle mitochondria from UCP3 knockout mice. The carboxyatractylate-sensitive hydroxynonenal stimulation correlated with ANT content in mitochondria from Drosophila melanogaster expressing different amounts of ANT. Our findings indicate that hydroxynonenal is not merely toxic, but may be a biological signal to induce uncoupling through UCPs and ANT and thus decrease mitochondrial ROS production.  相似文献   

14.
Mitochondrial uncoupling in skeletal muscle has raised a major interest as a therapeutic target for treatment of obesity, insulin sensitivity, and age-related disease. These physiological effects could be demonstrated in several mouse models ectopically expressing uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1). Here, we investigated whether UCP1 expressed under the control of the human skeletal actin (HSA) promoter in mouse skeletal muscle can be regulated, and whether it affects mitochondrial superoxide production. We show that the skeletal muscle UCP1 can be fully inhibited by a purine nucleotide (GDP) and reactivated by fatty acids (palmitate). During mitochondrial resting state (State 4), mitochondrial superoxide production is about 76% lower in transgenic mice. We suggest that this reduction is due to uncoupling activity as the administration of GDP restores superoxide production to wildtype levels. Our study confirms native behaviour of UCP1 in skeletal muscle and demonstrates beneficial effects on prevention of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production which may reduce age-related deleterious processes.  相似文献   

15.
In vitro, uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3)-mediated uncoupling requires cofactors [e.g., superoxides, coenzyme Q (CoQ) and fatty acids (FA)] or their derivatives, but it is not yet clear whether or how such activators interact with each other under given physiological or pathophysiological conditions. Since triiodothyronine (T3) stimulates lipid metabolism, UCP3 expression and mitochondrial uncoupling, we examined its effects on some biochemical pathways that may underlie UCP3-mediated uncoupling. T3-treated rats (Hyper) showed increased mitochondrial lipid-oxidation rates, increased expression and activity of enzymes involved in lipid handling and increased mitochondrial superoxide production and CoQ levels. Despite the higher mitochondrial superoxide production in Hyper, euthyroid and hyperthyroid mitochondria showed no differences in proton-conductance when FA were chelated by bovine serum albumin. However, mitochondria from Hyper showed a palmitoyl-carnitine-induced and GDP-inhibited increased proton-conductance in the presence of carboxyatractylate. We suggest that T3 stimulates the UCP3 activity in vivo by affecting the complex network of biochemical pathways underlying the UCP3 activation.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The mechanism of thermoregulatory uncoupling of respiration and phosphorylation in skeletal muscles has been studied. It is found that 24 h cold exposure results in (i) a 3-fold increase in the amount of UCP3 protein in rat skeletal muscle mitochondria, and (ii) pronounced lowering of the membrane potential in isolated rat or mouse skeletal muscle mitochondria. The decrease in membrane potential is reversed by adding bovine serum albumin. Cold exposure is also found to sensitize the membrane potential to the uncoupling action of added fatty acid (laurate). After laurate addition, the recoupling effects of GDP and carboxyatractylate decrease whereas that of albumin increases in mitochondria from cold-treated rats or mice. Changes similar to those induced by cold can be initiated by the in vivo addition of thyroxine. Cold exposure does not affect energy coupling in liver mitochondria. The possible involvement of UCP3 isoforms in nucleotide-sensitive and -insensitive uncoupling is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
To clarify the role of uncoupling protein-3 (UCP3) in skeletal muscle, we used NMR and isotopic labeling experiments to evaluate the effect of UCP3 knockout (UCP3KO) in mice on the regulation of energy metabolism in vivo. Whole body energy expenditure was determined from the turnover of doubly labeled body water. Coupling of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in skeletal muscle was evaluated from measurements of rates of ATP synthesis (using (31)P NMR magnetization transfer experiments) and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle flux (calculated from the time course of (13)C enrichment in C-4 and C-2 of glutamate during an infusion of [2-(13)C]acetate). At the whole body level, we observed no change in energy expenditure. However, at the cellular level, skeletal muscle UCP3KO increased the rate of ATP synthesis from P(i) more than 4-fold under fasting conditions (wild type, 2.2 +/- 0.6 versus knockout, 9.1 +/- 1.4 micromol/g of muscle/min, p < 0.001) with no change in TCA cycle flux rate (wild type, 0.74 +/- 0.04 versus knockout, 0.71 +/- 0.03 micromol/g of muscle/min). The increased efficiency of ATP production may account for the significant (p < 0.05) increase in the ratio of ATP to ADP in the muscle of UCP3KO mice (5.9 +/- 0.3) compared with controls (4.5 +/- 0.4). The data presented here provide the first evidence of uncoupling activity by UCP3 in skeletal muscle in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The physiological role of mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCPs) in heart and skeletal muscle is unknown, as is whether mitochondrial uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation by fatty acids occurs in vivo. In this study, we found that UCP2 and UCP3 protein content, determined using Western blotting, was increased by 32 and 48%, respectively, in hyperthyroid rat heart mitochondria. Oligomycin-insensitive respiration rate, a measure of mitochondrial uncoupling, was increased in all mitochondria in the presence of palmitate: 36% in controls and 71 and 100% with 0.8 and 0.9 mM palmitate, respectively, in hyperthyroid rat heart mitochondria. In the isolated working heart, 0.4 mM palmitate significantly lowered cardiac output by 36% and cardiac efficiency by 38% in the hyperthyroid rat heart. Thus increased mitochondrial UCPs in the hyperthyroid rat heart were associated with increased uncoupling and decreased myocardial efficiency in the presence of palmitate. In conclusion, a physiological effect of UCPs on fatty acid oxidation has been found in heart at the mitochondrial and whole organ level.  相似文献   

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