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The brown adipose tissue glucagon receptor is functional but not essential for control of energy homeostasis in mice

Authors :
Jacqueline L. Beaudry
Kiran Deep Kaur
Elodie M. Varin
Laurie L. Baggio
Xiemin Cao
Erin E. Mulvihill
Jennifer H. Stern
Jonathan E. Campbell
Phillip E. Scherer
Daniel J. Drucker
Source :
Molecular Metabolism, Vol 22, Iss , Pp 37-48 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Objective: Administration of glucagon (GCG) or GCG-containing co-agonists reduces body weight and increases energy expenditure. These actions appear to be transduced by multiple direct and indirect GCG receptor (GCGR)-dependent mechanisms. Although the canonical GCGR is expressed in brown adipose tissue (BAT) the importance of BAT GCGR activity for the physiological control of body weight, or the response to GCG agonism, has not been defined. Methods: We studied the mechanisms linking GCG action to acute increases in oxygen consumption using wildtype (WT), Ucp1−/− and Fgf21−/− mice. The importance of basal GCGR expression within the Myf5+ domain for control of body weight, adiposity, glucose and lipid metabolism, food intake, and energy expenditure was examined in GcgrBAT−/− mice housed at room temperature or 4 °C, fed a regular chow diet (RCD) or after a prolonged exposure to high fat diet (HFD). Results: Acute GCG administration induced lipolysis and increased the expression of thermogenic genes in BAT cells, whereas knockdown of Gcgr reduced expression of genes related to thermogenesis. GCG increased energy expenditure (measured by oxygen consumption) both in vivo in WT mice and ex vivo in BAT and liver explants. GCG also increased acute energy expenditure in Ucp1−/− mice, but these actions were partially blunted in Ffg21−/− mice. However, acute GCG administration also robustly increased oxygen consumption in GcgrBAT−/− mice. Moreover, body weight, glycemia, lipid metabolism, body temperature, food intake, activity, energy expenditure and adipose tissue gene expression profiles were normal in GcgrBAT−/− mice, either on RCD or HFD, whether studied at room temperature, or chronically housed at 4 °C. Conclusions: Exogenous GCG increases oxygen consumption in mice, also evident both in liver and BAT explants ex vivo, through UCP1-independent, FGF21-dependent pathways. Nevertheless, GCGR signaling within BAT is not physiologically essential for control of body weight, whole body energy expenditure, glucose homeostasis, or the adaptive metabolic response to cold or prolonged exposure to an energy dense diet. Keywords: Glucagon, brown adipose tissue, Energy expenditure, Adiposity, Lipolysis, Thermogenesis

Subjects

Subjects :
Internal medicine
RC31-1245

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22128778
Volume :
22
Issue :
37-48
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.34b08743c20a4fa3babce0d5ea0b6b24
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2019.01.011