Abstract

What is the topic of this review? Brown fat's role in meal-associated thermogenesis and the related consequences for energy balance regulation with a focus on the gut hormone secretin, which has been identified as the endocrine molecular mediator of meal-associated brown fat thermogenesis. What advances does it highlight? The finding of the secretin-induced gut-brown fat-brain axis creates new opportunities to manipulate brown fat and thereby energy balance in a natural way while living in a thermoneutral environment. The role of brown fat as a mere catabolic heater organ needs to be revised and more attention should be directed towards the regulatory role of brown fat beyond energy expenditure. Brown fat research concentrates on the energy expenditure function of this heating organ, whereas previous evidence for a role of brown fat in regulating energy intake has been mostly neglected. Ingestion of a single mixed meal activates human brown fat thermogenesis to the same degree as cold. In mice, activation of brown fat thermogenesis with a β3 -adrenergic receptor agonist inhibits food intake. Pharmacological β-blockade, however, inhibits neither meal-associated thermogenesis nor food intake. We recently identified the gut hormone secretin as a non-adrenergic activator of brown fat. In vivo, secretin treatment acutely increases energy expenditure and inhibits food intake in wild-type, but not in uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1)-knockout (KO) mice, which lack thermogenic brown fat function. Concurrently, secretin alters gene expression of melanocortinergic peptides of hypothalamic neurons in wild-type mice, but not UCP1-KO. Blocking endogenous secretin with a neutralizing antibody attenuates brown fat thermogenesis during refeeding, increases food intake of mice, and alters ad libitum feeding behaviour. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that secretin triggers an endocrine gut-brown adipose tissue-brain axis in the control of satiation. We hypothesize that meal-associated activation of brown adipose tissue thermogenesis induced by secretin results in a rise in brain temperature and increased melanocortinergic signalling. Taken together, brown fat is not a mere heating organ dissipating excess calories but also involved in gut-brain communication in the control of food intake.

Highlights

  • What is the topic of this review? Brown fat’s role in meal-associated thermogenesis and the related consequences for energy balance regulation with a focus on the gut hormone secretin, which has been identified as the endocrine molecular mediator of mealassociated brown fat thermogenesis

  • We recently revealed a novel endocrine gut–brown fat–brain axis triggered by secretin release from the intestine during a meal (Li et al, 2018)

  • Our findings demonstrate that secretin mediates a gut–brown fat–brain axis in the control of satiation

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Summary

BROWN ADIPOSE TISSUE BEYOND COLD-INDUCED THERMOGENESIS

We are experiencing a global epidemic of obesity, a major risk factor for the development of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes mellitus, dyslipidaemias, hepatic steatosis, hypertension and arteriosclerosis. In contrast to white adipose tissue, which stores fat as the major backup for times of limited food supply, brown fat generates heat in response to cold exposure (Rosen & Spiegelman, 2006) and thereby dissipates chemical energy of nutrients by uncoupling oxygen consumption from ATP synthesis (Klingenspor, 2003) This mechanism depends on uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), which is exclusively found in the. Other than cold-induced thermogenesis, resting metabolic rate is increased in association with a meal, known as the specific dynamic action or thermal effect of food This effect is partially due to the obligatory costs of digestion and resorption, a facultative component mediated by brown fat has been discussed for a long time (Glick, Teague, & Bray, 1981; Rothwell & Stock, 1979). Blockage of β-ARs with propranolol does not attenuate the early meal-associated rise in whole body heat production caused by a carbohydrate meal or carbohydrate-rich meal (Astrup, Simonsen, Bulow, Madsen, & Christensen, 1989; Thorne & Wahren, 1989; Zwillich et al, 1981)

New Findings
THE MISERY OF WEIGHT LOSS
MANIPULATING MEAL-ASSOCIATED BROWN FAT THERMOGENESIS TO ACHIEVE WEIGHT LOSS
Method of estimation
FUNDING INFORMATION
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