TitleBrown adipose tissue but not tibia exhibits a dramatic response to acute reduction in environmental temperature in growing male mice.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsWong, CP, Iwaniec, UT, Turner, RT
JournalBone Rep
Volume19
Pagination101706
Date Published08/2023
ISSN2352-1872
Abstract

Highlights

  • Mice are typically housed at ∼22 °C, a temperature below thermoneutral (∼32 °C).
  • We compared 24-hr response of BAT and tibia to a reduction in temperature.
  • Decreased temperature resulted in changes in expression for 48/86 genes in BAT.
  • Only 1/86 genes were differentially expressed in tibia.
  • Bone does not respond as rapidly as BAT to changes in environmental temperature.

 

Mice are typically housed at room temperature (∼22 °C), which is well below their thermoneutral zone and results in cold stress. Chronic cold stress leads to increased adaptive thermogenesis and reductions in cancellous bone volume and bone marrow adipose tissue mass in long bones of growing mice. There is strong evidence that increased neuronal activity initiates the metabolic response of intrascapular brown adipose tissue (BAT) to cold stress, but it is less clear whether bone is regulated through a similar mechanism. Therefore, we compared the short-term response of BAT and whole tibia to a reduction in environmental temperature. To accomplish this, we transferred a group of 6-week-old male mice from 32 °C to 22 °C housing and sacrificed the mice 24 h later. Age-matched controls were maintained at 32 °C. We then evaluated expression levels of a panel of genes related to adipocyte differentiation and fat metabolism in BAT and tibia, and a panel of genes related to bone metabolism in tibia. The decrease in housing temperature resulted in changes in expression levels for 47/86 genes related to adipocyte differentiation and fat metabolism in BAT, including 9-fold and 17-fold increases in and , respectively. In contrast, only 1/86 genes related to adipocyte differentiation and fat metabolism and 4/84 genes related to bone metabolism were differentially expressed in tibia. These findings suggest that bone, although innervated with sensory and sympathetic neurons, does not respond as rapidly as BAT to changes in environmental temperature.

DOI10.1016/j.bonr.2023.101706
Alternate JournalBone Rep
PubMed ID37637756
PubMed Central IDPMC10448410