Raman Ahluwalia, Ineke H N Luijten, Celso P B Sousa-Filho, G Ruda F Braz, Natasa Petrovic, Irina G Shabalina, Barbara Cannon, Jan Nedergaard
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The existence of the phenomenon of diet-induced thermogenesis - and its possible mediation by UCP1 in brown adipose tissue - has long been, and is presently, an important metabolic controversy. Particularly, several recent studies have failed to observe the hallmark of the phenomenon: augmentation of diet-induced obesity in UCP1-ablated mice, thus further casting doubt on the possible importance of this thermogenesis for human metabolic control. However, scrutiny of the experimental details revealed important procedural differences between experiments that did not or did show this augmentation of diet-induced obesity. Particularly, there were notable differences between the commercial diets used (Research-Diets or Ssniff). We therefore tested to what degree these differences would suffice to explain the absence of a UCP1 effect. Wildtype mice fed Research-Diets high-fat diet became obese but UCP1-ablated mice became even more obese, as expected if UCP1-dependent diet-induced thermogenesis exists. Mice fed the Ssniff high-fat diet became less obese than those on the Research-Diets food - and, importantly, no effect of UCP1 ablation was seen. The result with the Research-Diets diet was fully due to differences in total fat mass and not explainable by differences in food intake. The two diets are different in carbohydrate (sucrose) and lipid (lard versus palm oil) composition and in texture and taste. Probably some of these factors explain the difference but the important conclusion is that when an appropriate diet was offered, the body weight manifestation of UCP1-dependent diet-induced thermogenesis was a reproducible phenomenon that may have significance also for human metabolic control.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism publishes original, mechanistic studies on the physiology of endocrine and metabolic systems. Physiological, cellular, and molecular studies in whole animals or humans will be considered. Specific themes include, but are not limited to, mechanisms of hormone and growth factor action; hormonal and nutritional regulation of metabolism, inflammation, microbiome and energy balance; integrative organ cross talk; paracrine and autocrine control of endocrine cells; function and activation of hormone receptors; endocrine or metabolic control of channels, transporters, and membrane function; temporal analysis of hormone secretion and metabolism; and mathematical/kinetic modeling of metabolism. Novel molecular, immunological, or biophysical studies of hormone action are also welcome.