Literature DB >> 6380306

Sympathoadrenal system and regulation of thermogenesis.

L Landsberg, M E Saville, J B Young.   

Abstract

The sympathetic nervous system (SNS) plays a critical role in the regulation of mammalian thermogenic responses to cold exposure and dietary intake. Catecholamine-stimulated thermogenesis is mediated by the beta-adrenergic receptor. In the rat brown adipose tissue is the major site of metabolic heat production in response to both cold (nonshivering thermogenesis) and diet (diet-induced thermogenesis). Measurements of norepinephrine turnover rate in interscapular brown adipose tissue of the rat demonstrate increased sympathetic activity in response to both cold exposure and overfeeding. In adult humans, a physiologically significant role for brown adipose tissue has not been established but cannot be excluded. It appears likely that dietary changes in SNS activity are related, at least in part, to the changes in metabolic rate that occur in association with changes in dietary intake.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6380306     DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.1984.247.2.E181

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  36 in total

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Review 4.  Pathophysiology of sympathoadrenal system.

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5.  Deficiency of MGAT2 increases energy expenditure without high-fat feeding and protects genetically obese mice from excessive weight gain.

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6.  Core body temperature, energy expenditure, and epinephrine during fasting, eucaloric feeding, and overfeeding in healthy adult men: evidence for a ceiling effect for human thermogenic response to diet.

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7.  PI3Kγ within a nonhematopoietic cell type negatively regulates diet-induced thermogenesis and promotes obesity and insulin resistance.

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8.  Betaine feeding prevents the blood alcohol cycle in rats fed alcohol continuously for 1 month using the rat intragastric tube feeding model.

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9.  Uncoupling Protein 1 and Sarcolipin Are Required to Maintain Optimal Thermogenesis, and Loss of Both Systems Compromises Survival of Mice under Cold Stress.

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Review 10.  Do the obese have lower body temperatures? A new look at a forgotten variable in energy balance.

Authors:  Lewis Landsberg; James B Young; William R Leonard; Robert A Linsenmeier; Fred W Turek
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