First Author | Bengtsson T | Year | 1996 |
Journal | J Biol Chem | Volume | 271 |
Issue | 52 | Pages | 33366-75 |
PubMed ID | 8969197 | Mgi Jnum | J:37314 |
Mgi Id | MGI:84716 | Doi | 10.1074/jbc.271.52.33366 |
Citation | Bengtsson T, et al. (1996) Down-regulation of beta3 adrenoreceptor gene expression in brown fat cells is transient and recovery is dependent upon a short-lived protein factor. J Biol Chem 271(52):33366-75 |
abstractText | The regulation of the expression of the beta3 adrenoreceptor gene was examined in the brown adipose tissue of intact mice and in murine brown fat primary cell cultures. Both in vivo and in vitro, high levels of beta3 receptor mRNA were observed. Acute cold exposure of mice resulted in a marked and rapid down-regulation of beta3 gene expression; this down-regulation was, however, transient. Similarly, in brown fat cell cultures, norepinephrine addition led to down-regulation of beta3 gene expression, with a lag phase of 30 min and with an apparent half-life of beta3 mRNA of approximately 30 min. This down-regulation was stimulated via the beta3 receptors themselves and mediated via cAMP; the apparent affinity of norepinephrine was extremely high (<1 nM). The degradation rate after actinomycin was identical to that after norepinephrine and was not affected by the presence of norepinephrine; thus, the down-regulation was due to cessation of transcription but not to an increased rate of degradation. Notably, inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide also led to down-regulation. The norepinephrine-induced down-regulation was transient; spontaneous recovery occurred after approximately 18 h and was not due to depletion of adrenergic agent. Recovery did not occur in the presence of cycloheximide. After recovery, the cells showed a functional desensitization of the down-regulation process itself (EC50 now approximately 10 nM). It is concluded that a down-regulated state cannot explain the functional desensitization of beta3 adrenergic responsiveness observed in brown fat cells isolated from cold-acclimated animals (i.e. physiologically chronically adrenergically stimulated brown fat cells); since the beta3 receptor is not subject to desensitization via phosphorylation processes, no satisfactory explanation for the functional desensitization exists as yet. A model is presented for the down-regulation/recovery process, involving the participation of a phosphorylatable short-lived transcription factor. |