| Literature DB >> 26175716 |
Minwoo Nam1, Marcus P Cooper1.
Abstract
In murine and human brown adipose tissue (BAT), mitochondria are powerful generators of heat that safely metabolize fat, a feature that has great promise in the fight against obesity and diabetes. Recent studies suggest that the actions of mitochondria extend beyond their conventional role as generators of heat. There is mounting evidence that impaired mitochondrial respiratory capacity is accompanied by attenuated expression of Ucp1 and other BAT-selective genes, implying that mitochondria exert transcriptional control over the brown fat gene program. In this review, we discuss the current understanding of brown fat mitochondria, their potential role in transcriptional control of the brown fat gene program, and potential strategies to treat obesity in humans by leveraging thermogenesis in brown adipocytes.Entities:
Keywords: brown fat; brown fat gene program; mitochondria; respiratory capacity; thermogenesis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26175716 PMCID: PMC4485181 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2015.00104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Effects of manipulating mitochondrial respiratory capacity on the brown fat gene program.
| Model | Respiratory capacity | Mitochondrial mass | Brown fat morphology | Brown fat genes | Other | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COX7RP KO | ↓10–20% in O2 consumption | n/a | Hypertrophic Pale brown | ↓75% in | Normal | Ikeda et al. ( | |
| TFAM FKO (Fabp4-Cre) | ↓40–60% in complex I and IV; | ↑20% in citrate synthase activity | Normal | Normal | ↓DIO | Vernochet et al. ( | |
| Mouse | TFAM FKO (Adipoq-Cre) | ↓40–80% in complex I and IV (BAT) | ↑80% in citrate synthase activity | Whitening | Normal | ↓DIO | Vernochet et al. ( |
| CRIF1 FKO (Fabp4-Cre) | ↓OXPHOS subunits protein | ↓Mitochondrial abundance | Smaller size | Unaltered UCP1 | Defective WAT postnatal death at week 3 | Ryu et al. ( | |
| LSD1 Tg (IWAT) | ↑ | ↑Mitochondrial abundance | ↑Beige/brite adipocytes in IWAT | ↑ | ↓DIO | Duteil et al. ( | |
| Cell | LRPPRC KD in brown adipocytes | ↓20% in O2 consumption | ↓40–75% in | Cooper et al. 2008 ( | |||
↓, Decrease; ↑, increase; KO, knockout; Tg, transgenic; FKO, fat-specific KO; KD, knockdown; mt, mitochondria; BAT, brown adipose tissue; IWAT, inguinal white adipose tissue; DIO, diet-induced obesity; n/a, not assessed.
Figure 1Mitochondria exert transcriptional control over gene programs involved in oxidative metabolism and thermogenesis. Transcriptional control is dependent on mitochondrial respiratory capacity. In this model, impaired respiratory capacity acts as a transcriptional checkpoint, whereas augmented respiratory capacity acts as a transcriptional trigger. In humans and mice, obesity is associated with reduced brown fat function. Our model may explain the inverse association between respiratory capacity and thermogenic gene expression in brown fat of certain obese mice (eg. ob/ob) and perhaps obese humans.