RRC ID 88572
Author Izumi-Mishima Y, Tsutsumi R, Shiuchi T, Fujimoto S, Taniguchi M, Sugiuchi M, Tsutsumi M, Okamatsu-Ogura Y, Yoneshiro T, Kuroda M, Nomura K, Sakaue H.
Title Brown adipose tissue and skeletal muscle coordinately contribute to thermogenesis in mice.
Journal Elife
Abstract Endotherms increase the rate of metabolism in metabolic organs as one strategy to cope with a decline in the temperature of the external environment. However, an additional major contributor to maintenance of body temperature in a cold environment is contraction-based thermogenesis in skeletal muscle. Here, we show that impairment of hind limb muscle contraction by cast immobilization induced a loss of function of skeletal muscle and activated brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis as a compensatory mechanism. BAT utilizes free branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) derived from skeletal muscle as an energy substrate for thermogenesis, and interleukin-6 released by skeletal muscle stimulates BCAAs production in muscle for support of BAT thermogenesis. Additionally, this thermoregulatory system between BAT and skeletal muscle may also play an important role in response to cold temperatures or acute stress. Our findings suggest that BAT and skeletal muscle cooperate to maintain body temperature in endotherms.
Volume 13
Published 2025-10-27
DOI 10.7554/eLife.99982
PII 99982
PMID 41143503
PMC PMC12558653
MeSH Adipose Tissue, Brown* / metabolism Adipose Tissue, Brown* / physiology Amino Acids, Branched-Chain / metabolism Animals Interleukin-6 / metabolism Male Mice Mice, Inbred C57BL Muscle, Skeletal* / metabolism Muscle, Skeletal* / physiology Thermogenesis*
Resource
Mice RBRC04918