Cold acclimation and oxygen consumption in the thymus
Citation:
Brennan, C.M., Breen, E.P. and Porter, R.K., Cold acclimation and oxygen consumption in the thymus, Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. 2006 Nov;1757(11):1463-1468Download Item:
Abstract:
Mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 is usually associated with brown adipose tissue but has recently been discovered in rat and mouse thymus. We wished to establish whether there was a thermogenic role for UCP 1 in thymus and thus examined the effect of 5 weeks cold-acclimation on rat thymus tissue abundance, thymocyte oxygen consumption, thymus mitochondrial abundance, uncoupling protein 1 expression and function. We found that thymocytes from cold-acclimated rats had oxygen consumption rates 8 times less than those from rats held at room temperature and that thymocytes from cold-acclimated rats or rats kept at room temperature were noradrenaline insensitive. In addition, we found that thymus tissue or mitochondrial abundance was not increased after cold-acclimation. However uncoupling protein 1 expression per unit mass of mitochondria was increased after cold-acclimation, as determined by immunoblotting (approximately 1.7-fold) and GDP binding (approximately 1.5-fold). Consistent with our protein expression data, we also observed an increased, state 4 (approximately 1.5-fold), GDP-inhibitable (approximately 1.3-fold) and palmitate activatable (approximately 1.6-fold) oxygen consumption rates in isolated thymus mitochondria. However, extrapolation of our data showed that cold-acclimation only increased the amount of UCP 1 per gram of thymus tissue approximately 1.2-fold. Taken together, we conclude that UCP 1 does not have a thermogenic role in thymus.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/rkporterDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: PORTER, RICHARD KEVIN
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
1757;11;
Biochimica Biophysica Acta (Bioenergetics);