4.5 Article

Pharmacological and Genetic Manipulation of p53 in Brown Fat at Adult But Not Embryonic Stages Regulates Thermogenesis and Body Weight in Male Mice

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 157, Issue 7, Pages 2735-2749

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/en.2016-1209

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [BFU2013-46109, BFU2011, BFU2012-35255]
  2. Xunta de Galicia [R2014/050, EM 2012/039, 2012-CP069]
  3. Institute de Salud Carlos III [PI12/01814]
  4. Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red de Fisiopatologia de la Obesidad y Nutricion
  5. Fondo Social Europeo of the European Community funds
  6. European Community from NeuroFAST [245009]
  7. European Community [245009]
  8. National Development Agency [BONUS HU 08/2-2011-0006]
  9. Galician Government (Xunta de Galicia) [ED481B2014/039-0]
  10. Institute de Salud Carlos III/Servicio Galego de Saude (SERGAS) through Research Contract Sara Borrell [CD14/00091]
  11. German Research Foundation (DFG) [SCHU 2445/2-1]
  12. European Research Council [ERC-2012-StG-AgeingStemCell-Fate311082]
  13. German Center for Diabetes Research
  14. [ERC-2011-StG-OBESITY53-281408]
  15. European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes [RS FS 2015_1] Funding Source: researchfish

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p53 is a well-known tumor suppressor that plays multiple biological roles, including the capacity to modulate metabolism at different levels. However, its metabolic role in brown adipose tissue (BAT) remains largely unknown. Herein we sought to investigate the physiological role of endogenous p53 in BAT and its implication on BAT thermogenic activity and energy balance. To this end, we generated and characterized global p53-null mice and mice lacking p53 specifically in BAT. Additionally we performed gain-and-loss-of-function experiments in the BAT of adult mice using virogenetic and pharmacological approaches. BAT was collected and analyzed by immunohistochemistry, thermography, real-time PCR, and Western blot. p53-deficient mice were resistant to diet-induced obesity due to increased energy expenditure and BAT activity. However, the deletion of p53 in BAT using a Myf5-Cre driven p53 knockout did not show any changes in body weight or the expression of thermogenic markers. The acute inhibition of p53 in the BAT of adult mice slightly increased body weight and inhibited BAT thermogenesis, whereas its overexpression in the BAT of diet-induced obese mice reduced body weight and increased thermogenesis. On the other hand, pharmacological activation of p53 improves body weight gain due to increased BAT thermogenesis by sympathetic nervous system in obese adult wild-type mice but not in p53(-/-) animals. These results reveal that p53 regulates BAT metabolism by coordinating body weight and thermogenesis, but these metabolic actions are tissue specific and also dependent on the developmental stage.

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