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Publication : BCAA-nitrogen flux in brown fat controls metabolic health independent of thermogenesis.

First Author  Verkerke ARP Year  2024
Journal  Cell Volume  187
Issue  10 Pages  2359-2374.e18
PubMed ID  38653240 Mgi Jnum  J:348777
Mgi Id  MGI:7639528 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2024.03.030
Citation  Verkerke ARP, et al. (2024) BCAA-nitrogen flux in brown fat controls metabolic health independent of thermogenesis. Cell 187(10):2359-2374.e18
abstractText  Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is best known for thermogenesis. Rodent studies demonstrated that enhanced BAT thermogenesis is tightly associated with increased energy expenditure, reduced body weight, and improved glucose homeostasis. However, human BAT is protective against type 2 diabetes, independent of body weight. The mechanism underlying this dissociation remains unclear. Here, we report that impaired mitochondrial catabolism of branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) in BAT, by deleting mitochondrial BCAA carriers (MBCs), caused systemic insulin resistance without affecting energy expenditure and body weight. Brown adipocytes catabolized BCAA in the mitochondria as nitrogen donors for the biosynthesis of non-essential amino acids and glutathione. Impaired mitochondrial BCAA-nitrogen flux in BAT resulted in increased oxidative stress, decreased hepatic insulin signaling, and decreased circulating BCAA-derived metabolites. A high-fat diet attenuated BCAA-nitrogen flux and metabolite synthesis in BAT, whereas cold-activated BAT enhanced the synthesis. This work uncovers a metabolite-mediated pathway through which BAT controls metabolic health beyond thermogenesis.
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