Abstract

Five adrenoceptor (AR) subtypes (beta 1, beta 2, beta 3, alpha 2 and alpha 1), are involved in the control of white and brown fat cell function. A number of metabolic events are controlled by the adrenergic system in fat cells. The stimulatory effect of catecholamines on lipolysis and metabolism is mainly connected to increments in cAMP levels, cAMP protein kinase activation and phosphorylation of various target proteins. Norepinephrine and epinephrine operate through differential recruitment of alpha 2- and beta-AR subtypes on the basis of their relative affinity for the different subtypes (the relative order of affinity is alpha 2 > beta 1 > or = beta 2 > beta 3 for norepinephrine). Antagonistic actions at the level of cAMP production exist between alpha 2- and beta 1-, beta 2- and beta 3-AR-mediated lipolytic effects in human white fat cells. The role of fat cell alpha 2-ARs, which largely outnumber beta-ARs in fat cells of certain fat deposits, in human and primate has never been clearly understood. The other AR type which is not linked to lipolysis regulation, the alpha 1-AR, is involved in the control of glycogenolysis and lactate production. Pharmacological approaches using in-situ microdialysis and selective alpha 2- and beta-AR agonists and antagonists have revealed sex- and tissue-specific differences in the adrenergic control of fat cell function and nutritive blood flow in the tissue surrounding the microdialysis probe.

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