| Literature DB >> 33664495 |
Meng Shi1, Xiao-Yu Huang1, Xin-Yi Ren1, Xiao-Yan Wei1, Yue Ma1, Zhi-Zhong Lin1, Dong-Tai Liu1, Lintao Song1, Tong-Jin Zhao1, Guang Li1, Luming Yao1, Mingxia Zhu1, Cixiong Zhang1, Changchuan Xie1, Yaying Wu1, Han-Ming Wu2, Li-Ping Fan2, Jingxing Ou3, Yi-Hong Zhan2, Shu-Yong Lin4,5, Sheng-Cai Lin6.
Abstract
The sympathetic nervous system-catecholamine-uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) axis plays an essential role in non-shivering adaptive thermogenesis. However, whether there exists a direct effector that physically connects catecholamine signalling to UCP1 in response to acute cold is unknown. Here we report that outer mitochondrial membrane-located AIDA is phosphorylated at S161 by the catecholamine-activated protein kinase A (PKA). Phosphorylated AIDA translocates to the intermembrane space, where it binds to and activates the uncoupling activity of UCP1 by promoting cysteine oxidation of UCP1. Adipocyte-specific depletion of AIDA abrogates UCP1-dependent thermogenesis, resulting in hypothermia during acute cold exposure. Re-expression of S161A-AIDA, unlike wild-type AIDA, fails to restore the acute cold response in Aida-knockout mice. The PKA-AIDA-UCP1 axis is highly conserved in mammals, including hibernators. Denervation of the sympathetic postganglionic fibres abolishes cold-induced AIDA-dependent thermogenesis. These findings uncover a direct mechanistic link between sympathetic input and UCP1-mediated adaptive thermogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33664495 DOI: 10.1038/s41556-021-00642-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.824