Deletion of UCP1 enhances ex vivo aortic vasomotor function in female but not male mice despite similar susceptibility to metabolic dysfunction

Author:

Winn Nathan C.1,Grunewald Zachary I.1,Gastecki Michelle L.1,Woodford Makenzie L.1,Welly Rebecca J.1,Clookey Stephanie L.1,Ball James R.1,Gaines T’Keaya L.1,Karasseva Natalia G.2,Kanaley Jill A.1,Sacks Harold S.3,Vieira-Potter Victoria J.1ORCID,Padilla Jaume145

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition and Exercise Physiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri;

2. Transgenic Animal Core, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri;

3. Endocrine and Diabetes Division, Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, California;

4. Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri; and

5. Child Health, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri

Abstract

Females are typically more insulin sensitive than males, which may be partly attributed to greater brown adipose tissue (BAT) activity and uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) content. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that UCP1 deletion would abolish sex differences in insulin sensitivity and that whitening of thoracic periaortic BAT caused by UCP1 loss would be accompanied with impaired thoracic aortic function. Furthermore, because UCP1 exerts antioxidant effects, we examined whether UCP1 deficiency-induced metabolic dysfunction was mediated by oxidative stress. Compared with males, female mice had lower HOMA- and AT-insulin resistance (IR) despite no significant differences in BAT UCP1 content. UCP1 ablation increased HOMA-IR, AT-IR, and whitening of BAT in both sexes. Expression of UCP1 in thoracic aorta was greater in wild-type females compared with males. Importantly, deletion of UCP1 enhanced aortic vasomotor function in females only. UCP1 ablation did not promote oxidative stress in interscapular BAT. Furthermore, daily administration of the free radical scavenger tempol for 8 wk did not abrogate UCP1 deficiency-induced increases in adiposity, hyperinsulinemia, or liver steatosis. Collectively, we report that 1) in normal chow-fed mice housed at 25°C, aortic UCP1 content was greater in females than males and its deletion improved ex vivo aortic vasomotor function in females only; 2) constitutive UCP1 content in BAT was similar between females and males and loss of UCP1 did not abolish sex differences in insulin sensitivity; and 3) the metabolic disruptions caused by UCP1 ablation did not appear to be contingent upon increased oxidative stress in mice under normal dietary conditions.

Funder

American Egg Board

NIH Initiative for Maximizing Student Diversity EXPRESS Fellows Program

University of Missouri Research Council

University of Missouri Richard Wallace Faculty Incentive Grant

Cardiometabolic Disease Research Foundation

Sears Trust Research Foundation

HHS | National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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