Abstract

Tamoxifen (TAM) is commonly administered to a variety of inducible or conditional transgenic mice that contain Cre recombinase fused with ER. While the impacts of adult TAM treatment are well documented in the field of adipose biology, the long-term effects of postnatal TAM treatment on adult life are still understudied. In this study, we investigated whether postnatal TAM treatment had long-lasting effects on adult body composition and adiposity in male and female mice, fed either with chow or a high-fat diet (HFD). We found that postnatal, but not adult, TAM treatment had long-lasting impacts on female mice, resulting in lower body weight, lower fat mass, and smaller adipocytes. In contrast, postnatal exposure to TAM impaired male but not female cold-induced adipose beiging capacity. Interestingly, upon HFD feeding, the sex-dependent effects of TAM on adult life disappeared, and both female and male mice showed a more obese phenotype with impaired glucose tolerance. These findings suggest that postnatal TAM injection exerts a long-lasting impact on adipose tissue in adult life in a sex- and diet-dependent manner.

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