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Publication : Unexpected deposition of brown fat in mammary gland during postnatal development.

First Author  Gouon-Evans V Year  2002
Journal  Mol Endocrinol Volume  16
Issue  11 Pages  2618-27
PubMed ID  12403850 Mgi Jnum  J:132576
Mgi Id  MGI:3776322 Doi  10.1210/me.2001-0337
Citation  Gouon-Evans V, et al. (2002) Unexpected deposition of brown fat in mammary gland during postnatal development. Mol Endocrinol 16(11):2618-27
abstractText  Mammary fat tissue is crucial for mammary ductal morphogenesis in both fetal and adult mice. There are two kinds of adipocytes, the energy-storing white and the energy-dissipating brown adipocyte. The precise identity of the types of adipocyte in the mammary gland has never been investigated but was always assumed to be only white fat. In this study, we show that both white and brown adipocytes are present in the postnatal mammary gland. The amount of brown adipose tissue (BAT) examined by histology and electron microscopy correlates with the transcript levels of uncoupling protein 1, which is a mitochondrial carrier expressed exclusively in BAT. Uncoupling protein 1 mRNAs are the highest during prepuberty, decrease upon puberty, and are finally undetectable in the adult mammary gland. The analysis of a BAT-depleted mouse model showed that depletion of mammary BAT in early postnatal development induces epithelial differentiation. Alveolar structures were formed along all ducts and were functional since they produced beta-casein. However, mammary transplantation experiments indicated that a systemic effect was responsible for epithelium differentiation. Our data suggest that BAT negatively regulates the differentiation of mammary epithelial cells in a systemic manner during prepubertal ductal outgrowth.
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