Journal article
Ontogeny and thermogenic role for sternal fat in female sheep
BA Henry, M Pope, M Birtwistle, R Loughnan, R Alagal, JP Fuller-Jackson, V Perry, H Budge, IJ Clarke, ME Symonds
Endocrinology | ENDOCRINE SOC | Published : 2017
Abstract
Brown adipose tissue acting through a unique uncoupling protein (UCP1) has a critical role in preventing hypothermia in newborn sheep but is then thought to rapidly disappear during postnatal life. The extent to which the anatomical location of fat influences postnatal development and thermogenic function in adulthood, particularly following feeding, is unknown, and we examined both in our study. Changes in gene expression of functionally important pathways (i.e., thermogenesis, development, adipogenesis, and metabolism) were compared between sternal and retroperitoneal fat depots together with a representative skeletal muscle over the first month of postnatal life, coincident with the loss ..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Health and Medical Research Council Project Grant 1005935 (B.A.H).