Adipocyte Biology

Obesity (2008) 16, 285–289; doi:10.1038/oby.2007.47

Effects of IL-15 on Rat Brown Adipose Tissue: Uncoupling Proteins and PPARs

Vanessa Almendro1,2, Gemma Fuster1,2, Sílvia Busquets1, Elisabet Ametller1, Maite Figueras1, Josep M. Argilés1 and Francisco J. López-Soriano1

  1. 1Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
  2. 2These authors contributed equally to this work.

Correspondence: Francisco J. López-Soriano, (flopez@ub.edu)

Received 6 March 2007; Accepted 13 June 2007.

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Abstract

Objectives:

 

Interleukin-15 (IL-15) plays an important role in lipid metabolism as its administration to rats causes a marked depletion of white adipose tissue (WAT). This reduction in fat mass seems to be caused by and related to hipotriglyceridemia as a result of a lower hepatic lipogenesis and an increased fatty acid oxidation. We have previously observed that IL-15 treatment induces the expression of uncoupling proteins (UCPs) in muscle. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of IL-15 on brown adipose tissue (BAT), and in particular on genes related to lipid metabolism in this tissue.

Methods and Procedures:

 

Male Wistar rats were treated daily with IL-15 for 7 days. Adipose tissues were collected and the mRNA content of UCPs, peroxisome proliferator–activated receptors (PPARs) and several genes implicated in fatty acid transport and oxidation were evaluated on BAT.

Results:

 

IL-15 treatment in rats causes a decrease in the mass of both WAT and BAT (35 and 24%, respectively). In BAT, an important upregulation of the mRNA content of thermogenic proteins (UCP1 and UCP3), lipid-related transcription factors (PPARdelta and PPARalpha) and other proteins implicated in membrane transport (fatty acid translocase (FAT) and fatty acid transport protein (FATP)), mitochondrial transport (carnitine palmitoyl transferase-I (CPT-I) and CPT-II) and consumption (acyl-CoA synthetase 4 (ACS4)) of fatty acids was observed as a consequence of the treatment.

Discussion:

 

The changes observed in BAT suggest that IL-15 could be implicated in lipid consumption in this tissue by regulating lipid oxidation and probably thermogenesis, processes mediated by UCPs and PPARs.

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