Abstract
The regulation of uncoupling protein-3 (UCP-3) expression in muscle remains unclear, specifically in relation to dietary and drug treatments. The present study evaluated the effects of oleic acid and rosiglitazone on UCP-3 mRNA expression in differentiated L6 myotubes. L6 myocytes were cultured and differentiated prior to exposure to rosiglitazone 10 micro mol/l, oleic acid 100 micro mol/l, or the combination, for 24 h, prior to semiquantitative evaluation of UCP-3 mRNA relative to GAPDH mRNA by RT-PCR. Exposure to oleic acid produced a significant increase in UCP-3 mRNA (0.012 +/- 0.007 vs. 0.0011 +/- 0.0006 for untreated cells, relative to GAPDH mRNA, p < 0.001). Rosiglitazone alone had no effect on UCP-3 expression and nor did the glitazone affect oleic-acid-induced upregulation of UCP-3. In L6 myotubes, 24-h exposure to oleic acid produced a 10-fold increase in UCP-3 mRNA expression, but rosiglitazone had no effect. Oleic-acid-induced upregulation of UCP-3 was not affected (positively or negatively) by glitazone exposure.
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