Abstract

Cold exposure has been shown to increase glucose uptake specifically in brown adipose tissue (BAT), the major site for sympathetically controlled metabolic heat production. In this study, the relationship between glucose uptake and glucose transporters (GLUT) was examined in rats exposed to cold for various periods. To minimize the stimulatory effect of circulating insulin, all animals were starved for 20-24 h before the measurements. Acute (4 h) cold exposure had no effect on protein and mRNA levels of GLUT-4, the predominant isoform of GLUT in BAT, despite a significant increase in cellular glucose uptake. Prolonged (1-10 days) cold exposure produced a parallel increase in GLUT-4 expression and glucose uptake in BAT. In contrast, cold exposure had no noticeable effect on GLUT-1, another isoform of GLUT in BAT, and on GLUT-4 in other insulin-sensitive tissues such as white adipose tissue and muscles. The increased glucose uptake and GLUT-4 expression were completely abolished after surgical sympathetic denervation. These findings suggest that cold exposure increases glucose uptake in BAT by at least two distinct mechanisms, both of which are dependent on sympathetic nerve: 1) an increase in the amount of GLUT-4 due to the stimulation of its de novo synthesis, and 2) an increase without stimulation of GLUT synthesis, probably due to the change in the transport activity of GLUT-4 and/or its translocation from an intracellular pool to the plasma membrane.

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