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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The uncoupling protein UCP1 aids the production of heat by uncoupling respiration from oxidative phosphorylation in brown fat of rodents. UCP1 is down-regulated during
starvation
to conserve energy. Levels of other uncoupling proteins named UCP2 and
UCP3
, which are present in skeletal muscle, increase during
starvation
without changing heat production. Transgenic mice ectopically over-expressing
UCP3
lost weight and had less adipose tissue than controls, although they were hyperphagic. It was proposed that muscle
UCP3
regulated fat oxidation rather than thermogenesis.
...
PMID:The uncoupling proteins UCP2 and UCP3 in skeletal muscle. 1131 Jul 77
During the past few years, there have been two major developments, if not revolutions, in the field of energy balance and weight regulation. The first at the molecular level, which was catalysed by developments in DNA screening technology together with the mapping of the human genome, has been the tremendous advances made in the identification of molecules that play a role in the control of food intake and metabolic rate. The second, at the systemic level, which centered upon the use of modern technologies or more robust analytical techniques for assessing human energy expenditure in response to
starvation
and overfeeding, has been the publication of several papers providing strong evidence that adaptive thermogenesis plays a much more important role in the regulation of body weight and body composition than previously thought. Within these same few years, several new members of the mitochondrial carrier protein family have been identified in a variety of tissues and organs. All apparently possess uncoupling properties in genetically-modified systems, with two of them (uncoupling protein (UCP) 2 and
UCP3
) being expressed in adipose tissues and skeletal muscles, which are generally recognised as important sites for variations in thermogenesis and/or in substrate oxidation. Considered as breakthrough discoveries, the cloning of these genes has generated considerable optimism for rapid advances in our molecular understanding of adaptive thermogenesis, and for the identification of new targets for pharmacological management of obesity and cachexia. The present paper traces first, from a historical perspective, the landmark events in the field of thermogenesis that led to the identification of these genes encoding candidate UCP, and then addresses the controversies and on-going debate about their physiological importance in adaptive thermogenesis, in lipid oxidation or in oxidative stress. The general conclusion is that UCP2 and
UCP3
may have distinct primary functions, with
UCP3
implicated in regulating the flux of lipid substrates across the mitochondria and UCP2 in the control of mitochondrial generation of reactive oxygen species. The distinct functions of these two UCP1 homologues have been incorporated in a conceptual model to illustrate how UCP2 and
UCP3
may act in concert in the overall regulation of lipid oxidation concomitant to the prevention of lipid-induced oxidative damage.
...
PMID:Uncoupling proteins: their roles in adaptive thermogenesis and substrate metabolism reconsidered. 1150 24
A role for uncoupling protein (UCP) 3 in fatty acid metabolism is reviewed within the context of our proposal, first put forward in 1998, that this homologue of UCP1 may be involved in the regulation of lipids as fuel substrate rather than in the mediation of thermogenesis. Since then, the demonstrations of muscle-type differences in
UCP3
gene regulation in response to dietary manipulations (
starvation
, high-fat feeding) or to pharmacological interferences with the flux of lipid substrates between adipose-tissue stores and skeletal-muscle mitochondrial oxidation are all in accord with this proposed role for
UCP3
in regulating lipids as fuel substrate. However, given the current limitations of gene-knockout technology for evaluating/interpreting the functional importance of genes encoding mitochondrial membrane proteins, the transition from 'associative' to 'cause-and-effect' evidence for a physiological role of
UCP3
in regulating fatty acid metabolism will have to await the development of assays that are sensitive to changes in
UCP3
activity. Furthermore, in evaluating the physiological regulators of
UCP3
, the available evidence points to the existence of adipose-derived factor(s) which, independently of circulating levels of free fatty acids, initiates events leading to the transcription of genes encoding
UCP3
and key enzymes of lipid oxidation in the fast glycolytic or fast oxidative-glycolytic muscles, i.e. in the bulk of the skeletal-muscle mass. It is proposed that in tissues where
UCP3
co-exists with UCP2 (skeletal muscle, brown adipose tissue, heart) they may act in concert in the overall regulation of lipid oxidation, concomitant to the prevention of lipid-induced oxidative damage.
...
PMID:Uncoupling protein 3 and fatty acid metabolism. 1170 75
Ablation of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (PPAR) alpha, a lipid-activated transcription factor that regulates expression of beta-oxidative genes, results in profound metabolic abnormalities in liver and heart. In the present study we used PPAR alpha knockout (KO) mice to determine whether this transcription factor is essential for regulating fuel metabolism in skeletal muscle. When animals were challenged with exhaustive exercise or
starvation
, KO mice exhibited lower serum levels of glucose, lactate, and ketones and higher nonesterified fatty acids than wild type (WT) littermates. During exercise, KO mice exhausted earlier than WT and exhibited greater rates of glycogen depletion in liver but not skeletal muscle. Fatty acid oxidative capacity was similar between muscles of WT and KO when animals were fed and only 28% lower in KO muscles when animals were starved. Exercise-induced regulation and
starvation
-induced regulation of pyruvate-dehydrogenase kinase 4 and
uncoupling protein 3
, two classical and robustly responsive PPAR alpha target genes, were similar between WT and KO in skeletal muscle but markedly different between genotypes in heart. Real time quantitative PCR analyses showed that unlike in liver and heart, in mouse skeletal muscle PPAR delta is severalfold more abundant than either PPAR alpha or PPAR gamma. In both human and rodent myocytes, the highly selective PPAR delta agonist GW742 increased fatty acid oxidation about 2-fold and induced expression of several lipid regulatory genes, including pyruvate-dehydrogenase kinase 4 and
uncoupling protein 3
, responses that were similar to those elicited by the PPAR alpha agonist GW647. These results show redundancy in the functions of PPARs alpha and delta as transcriptional regulators of fatty acid homeostasis and suggest that in skeletal muscle high levels of the delta-subtype can compensate for deficiency of PPAR alpha.
...
PMID:Fatty acid homeostasis and induction of lipid regulatory genes in skeletal muscles of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) alpha knock-out mice. Evidence for compensatory regulation by PPAR delta. 1211 38
The "thrifty" genotype and phenotype that save energy are detrimental to the health of people living in affluent societies. Individual differences in energy metabolism are caused primarily by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), some of which promote the development of obesity/type 2 diabetes mellitus. In this review, four major questions are addressed: (1) Why did regional differences in energy metabolism develop during evolution? (2) How do genes respond to
starvation
and affluence? (3) Which SNPs correspond to the hypothetical "thrifty genes"? (4) How can we cope with disease susceptibility caused by the "thrifty" SNPs? We examined mtDNA and genes for energy metabolism in people who live in several parts of Asia and the Pacific islands. We included 14 genes, and the SNP frequencies of PPAR gamma 2, LEPR, and
UCP3
-p and some other genes differ significantly between Mongoloids and Caucasoids. These differences in SNPs may have been caused by natural selection depending on the types of agriculture practiced in different regions. Interventions to counteract the adverse effects of "thrifty" SNPs have been partially effective.
...
PMID:Single nucleotide polymorphisms of thrifty genes for energy metabolism: evolutionary origins and prospects for intervention to prevent obesity-related diseases. 1215 Sep 34
Burn trauma is a clinical condition accompanied by muscle wasting that severely impedes rehabilitation in burn survivors.
Mitochondrial uncoupling protein 3
(
UCP3
) is uniformly expressed in myoskeletal mitochondria and its expression has been found to increase in other clinical syndromes that, like burn trauma, are associated with muscle wasting (e.g.,
starvation
, fasting, cancer, sepsis). The aim of this study was to explore the effects of burn trauma on
UCP3
expression, intramyocellular lipids, and plasma-free fatty acids. Mice were studied at 6 h, 1 d and 3 d after nonlethal hindlimb burn trauma. Intramyocellular lipids in hindlimb skeletal muscle samples collected from burned and normal mice were measured using 1H NMR spectroscopy on a Bruker 14.1 Tesla spectrometer at 4 degrees C.
UCP3
mRNA and protein levels were also measured in these samples. Plasma-free fatty acids were measured in burned and normal mice. Local burn trauma was found to result in: 1) upregulation of
UCP3
mRNA and protein expression in hindlimb myoskeletal mitochondria by 6 h postburn; 2) increased intramyocellular lipids; and 3) increased plasma-free fatty acids. Our findings show that the increase in
UCP3
after burn trauma may be linked to burn-induced alterations in lipid metabolism. Such a link could reveal novel insights into how processes related to energy metabolism are controlled in burn and suggest that induction of
UCP3
by burn in skeletal muscle is protective by either activating cellular redox signaling and/or mitochondrial uncoupling.
...
PMID:Uncoupling protein 3 expression and intramyocellular lipid accumulation by NMR following local burn trauma. 1708 30
Associations between uncoupling protein (UCP) expression and functional changes in myocardial mitochondrial bio-energetics have not been well studied during periods of
starvation
stress. Our aim was to study the effects of acute
starvation
, for 24 or 48 h, on combined cardiac mitochondrial function and UCP expression in mice. Isolated heart mitochondria from female mice starved for 48 h compared to that from mice fed revealed a significantly (p < 0.05) decreased adenosine diphosphate-to-oxygen ratio, a significantly increased proton leak and an increased GTP inhibition on palmitic acid-induced state 4 oxygen consumption (p < 0.05). These bio-energetic functional changes were associated with increases in mitochondrial UCP2 and
UCP3 protein
expression. In conclusion, our findings suggest that increased UCP2 and
UCP3
levels may contribute to decreased myocardial mitochondrial bio-energetic function due to
starvation
.
...
PMID:Acute starvation in C57BL/6J mice increases myocardial UCP2 and UCP3 protein expression levels and decreases mitochondrial bio-energetic function. 2093 28
Mitochondrial uncoupling protein 3
(
UCP3
) is constitutively expressed in mitochondria from thymus and spleen of mice, and confocal microscopy has been used to visualize
UCP3
in situ in mouse thymocytes.
UCP3
is present in mitochondria of thymus and spleen up to at least 16 weeks after birth, but levels decrease by a half in thymus and a fifth in spleen after three weeks, probably reflecting the suckling to weaning transition.
UCP3 protein
levels increase approximately 3-fold in thymus on
starvation
, but expression levels in spleen were unaffected by
starvation
. Lack of
UCP3
had little effect on thymus mass or thymocyte number. However, lack of
UCP3
affected spleen mass and splenocyte number (in the fasted state) and results in reduced CD4+ single positive cell numbers and reduced double negative cells in the thymus, but as a 2-fold increase in the proportion of CD4(+), CD8(+) and DP cells in spleen.
Starvation
attenuates these proportionate differences in the spleen. A lack of
UCP3
had no apparent effect on basal oxygen consumption of thymocytes or splenocytes or on oxygen consumption due to mitochondrial proton leak. Splenocytes from
UCP3
knock-out mice are also more resistant to apoptosis than those from wild-type mice. Overall we can conclude that
UCP3
affects thymocyte and spleen cell profiles in the fed and fasted states.
...
PMID:Absence of mitochondrial uncoupling protein 3: effect on thymus and spleen in the fed and fasted mice. 2168 32
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