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INSERM U 478, Institut Fédératif de Recherche " Cellules épithéliales" IFR02, Faculté de Médecine Xavier Bichat, 75870 Paris, France
Uncoupling proteins (UCP),
specific mitochondrial proton transporters that function by uncoupling
oxidative metabolism from ATP synthesis, are involved in
thermoregulation and control of energy expenditure. The
hibernoma-derived T37i cells, which possess functional endogenous
mineralocorticoid receptors (MR), can undergo differentiation into
brown adipocytes. In differentiated T37i cells, UCP1 mRNA levels
increased 10- to 20-fold after retinoic acid or
-adrenergic
treatment. Interestingly, UCP2 and UCP3 mRNA was also detected.
Aldosterone treatment induced a drastic decrease in isoproterenol- and
retinoic acid-stimulated UCP1 mRNA levels in a time- and dose-dependent
manner (IC50
1 nM aldosterone). This inhibition was
unaffected by cycloheximide and did not modify UCP1 mRNA stability
(half-life time = 5 h), indicating that it occurs at the
transcriptional level. It involves both the MR and/or the
glucocorticoid receptor (GR), depending on the retinoic or catecholamine induction pathway. Basal UCP3 expression was also significantly reduced by aldosterone, whereas UCP2 mRNA levels were not
modified. Finally, as demonstrated by JC1 aggregate formation in living
cells, aldosterone restored mitochondrial membrane potential abolished
by isoproterenol or retinoic acid. Our results demonstrate that MR and
GR inhibit expression of UCP1 and UCP3, thus participating in the
control of energy expenditure.
aldosterone; mitochondria; steroids; thermogenesis; cell line; uncoupling proteins
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