Abstract

The effects of unilateral surgical denervation on brown adipose tissue (BAT) composition were evaluated to assess the importance of the sympathetic innervation in the maintenance of a high concentration of the uncoupling protein thermogenin in cold-acclimated (CA) mice and to assess whether suppression of neural activity could account for BAT atrophy observed during fasting or when CA mice are returned to a thermoneutral environment (33 degrees C). Denervation-induced BAT atrophy was characterized by protein and thermogenin losses in absence of changes in the tissue cellularity (DNA content). There was a marked reduction in the concentration of thermogenin in mitochondria isolated from denervated BAT, but the concentration of the adenine nucleotide translocator was unchanged. Fasting or exposure of CA mice to 33 degrees C induced a rapid and extensive loss of tissue protein from both innervated and denervated BAT. In CA mice exposed to 33 degrees C, there was also reduction in tissue cellularity and loss of thermogenin from BAT mitochondria. Since surgical denervation suppressed BAT hyperplasia and the increase in the mitochondrial concentration of thermogenin observed during cold exposure, these results indicate that an intact innervation is required for both synthesis and maintenance of a high mitochondrial content of thermogenin in CA mice. In addition, the lesser changes in tissue composition caused by denervation compared with those caused by fasting or exposure of CA mice to 33 degrees C question the importance of the suppression of neural activity as the exclusive cause of rapid BAT atrophy in mice.

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