| Literature DB >> 28988822 |
Hyunsu Shin1, Yinyan Ma2, Tatyana Chanturiya3, Qiang Cao4, Youlin Wang1, Anil K G Kadegowda5, Rachel Jackson5, Dominic Rumore5, Bingzhong Xue4, Hang Shi4, Oksana Gavrilova3, Liqing Yu6.
Abstract
Lipid droplet (LD) lipolysis in brown adipose tissue (BAT) is generally considered to be required for cold-induced nonshivering thermogenesis. Here, we show that mice lacking BAT Comparative Gene Identification-58 (CGI-58), a lipolytic activator essential for the stimulated LD lipolysis, have normal thermogenic capacity and are not cold sensitive. Relative to littermate controls, these animals had higher body temperatures when they were provided food during cold exposure. The increase in body temperature in the fed, cold-exposed knockout mice was associated with increased energy expenditure and with increased sympathetic innervation and browning of white adipose tissue (WAT). Mice lacking CGI-58 in both BAT and WAT were cold sensitive, but only in the fasted state. Thus, LD lipolysis in BAT is not essential for cold-induced nonshivering thermogenesis in vivo. Rather, CGI-58-dependent LD lipolysis in BAT regulates WAT thermogenesis, and our data uncover an essential role of WAT lipolysis in fueling thermogenesis during fasting.Entities:
Keywords: CGI-58; beige adipocyte; body temperature; energy expenditure; intracellular lipolysis; metabolic health; sympathetic activation; thermogenesis; white adipose tissue browning
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28988822 PMCID: PMC5905336 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2017.09.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287