Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity

Non-shivering thermogenesis in mammalian brown adipose tissue is a powerful mechanism to defend normothermia in cold climates. To minimize the loss of chemical energy, the central functional component, mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1, UCP1, must be tightly regulated. The canonical pathway of UCP1...

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Main Authors: Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner, Tobias Fromme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Endocrinology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fendo.2020.00118/full
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spelling doaj-8d66d78a588c405fb02eebccc016a5bc2020-11-25T02:09:39ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Endocrinology1664-23922020-03-011110.3389/fendo.2020.00118515289Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue ActivityAndrea Bast-Habersbrunner0Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner1Tobias Fromme2Tobias Fromme3Chair of Molecular Nutritional Medicine, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Munich, GermanyEKFZ - Else Kröner-Fresenius Center for Nutritional Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Munich, GermanyChair of Molecular Nutritional Medicine, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Munich, GermanyEKFZ - Else Kröner-Fresenius Center for Nutritional Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Munich, GermanyNon-shivering thermogenesis in mammalian brown adipose tissue is a powerful mechanism to defend normothermia in cold climates. To minimize the loss of chemical energy, the central functional component, mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1, UCP1, must be tightly regulated. The canonical pathway of UCP1 activation includes lipolytic release of free fatty acids in response to an adrenergic signal. Activating fatty acids overcome constitutive inhibition of UCP1 by the di- and triphosphate forms of purine nucleotides, i.e., ATP, ADP, GTP, and GDP. Cellular concentrations of inhibitory, free nucleotides are subject to significant, adrenergically induced alterations. The regulatory components involved may constitute novel drug targets to manipulate brown fat thermogenesis and thereby organismic energy balance. We here review evidence for and against a dominant role of nucleotides in thermogenic control, describe conceptual routes to endogenously and pharmacologically alter free nucleotide pool size, speculate on a signaling role of degradation products released from active brown fat, and highlight gaps in our understanding of signaling and metabolic pathways involved.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fendo.2020.00118/fullbrown adipose tissueuncoupling protein 1nucleotidesnon-shivering thermogenesismitochondriaGMP reductase
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
Tobias Fromme
Tobias Fromme
spellingShingle Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
Tobias Fromme
Tobias Fromme
Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity
Frontiers in Endocrinology
brown adipose tissue
uncoupling protein 1
nucleotides
non-shivering thermogenesis
mitochondria
GMP reductase
author_facet Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
Tobias Fromme
Tobias Fromme
author_sort Andrea Bast-Habersbrunner
title Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity
title_short Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity
title_full Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity
title_fullStr Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity
title_full_unstemmed Purine Nucleotides in the Regulation of Brown Adipose Tissue Activity
title_sort purine nucleotides in the regulation of brown adipose tissue activity
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Endocrinology
issn 1664-2392
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Non-shivering thermogenesis in mammalian brown adipose tissue is a powerful mechanism to defend normothermia in cold climates. To minimize the loss of chemical energy, the central functional component, mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1, UCP1, must be tightly regulated. The canonical pathway of UCP1 activation includes lipolytic release of free fatty acids in response to an adrenergic signal. Activating fatty acids overcome constitutive inhibition of UCP1 by the di- and triphosphate forms of purine nucleotides, i.e., ATP, ADP, GTP, and GDP. Cellular concentrations of inhibitory, free nucleotides are subject to significant, adrenergically induced alterations. The regulatory components involved may constitute novel drug targets to manipulate brown fat thermogenesis and thereby organismic energy balance. We here review evidence for and against a dominant role of nucleotides in thermogenic control, describe conceptual routes to endogenously and pharmacologically alter free nucleotide pool size, speculate on a signaling role of degradation products released from active brown fat, and highlight gaps in our understanding of signaling and metabolic pathways involved.
topic brown adipose tissue
uncoupling protein 1
nucleotides
non-shivering thermogenesis
mitochondria
GMP reductase
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fendo.2020.00118/full
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