Publication | Open Access
Brown adipose tissue–specific insulin receptor knockout shows diabetic phenotype without insulin resistance
222
Citations
32
References
2001
Year
Insulin ReceptorInsulin SignalingObesityMetabolic SyndromeDiabetic PhenotypeMetabolismHealth SciencesEnergy HomeostasisBiochemistryInsulin ManagementEnergy StorageBrown Adipose TissueEndocrinologyInsulin ResistancePhysiologyDiabetesMetabolic RegulationDiabetes MellitusSystems BiologyMedicine
Although insulin regulates metabolism in both brown and white adipocytes, the role of these tissues in energy storage and utilization is quite different. Recombination technology using the Cre-loxP approach allows inactivation of the insulin receptor in a tissue-specific manner. Mice lacking insulin receptors in brown adipocytes show an age-dependent loss of interscapular brown fat but increased expression of uncoupling protein-1 and -2. In parallel, these mice develop an insulin-secretion defect resulting in a progressive glucose intolerance, without insulin resistance. This model provides direct evidence for not only a role for the insulin receptors in brown fat adipogenesis, the data also suggest a novel role of brown adipose tissue in the regulation of insulin secretion and glucose homeostasis.
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