Decrease of oxidative activities in brown adipose tissue mitochondria of cold acclimated rats on short term exposure to heat stress
- PMID: 2372558
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2728(90)90191-6
Decrease of oxidative activities in brown adipose tissue mitochondria of cold acclimated rats on short term exposure to heat stress
Abstract
Exposure of rats to the cold (4-5 degrees C) caused large (2-3-fold) increases in the mass of interscapular brown adipose tissue (BAT), its mitochondrial content and the basal metabolic rate of the animals. The rate of substrate oxidation by BAT mitochondria also increased about 3-fold. When cold-acclimated animals were exposed to heat (37 degrees C), the BMR decreased by half in 3 h, the earliest time interval tested. Mitochondrial substrate oxidation, as well as substrate-dependent H2O2 generation, showed a proportionate decrease in rates. In these mitochondria, activities of cytochrome c reductases, but not dehydrogenases with NADH, alpha-glycerophosphate and succinate as substrates, also showed a significant decrease. The concentration of cytochromes aa3 and b, but not cytochrome c, also decreased in BAT mitochondria from 12-h heat-exposed animals, while the change in concentration of cytochrome b alone was found as early as 3 h of heat exposure. These results identify the change in cytochromes as a mechanism of regulation of oxidative activities in BAT mitochondria under conditions of acute heat stress.
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