Muscular changes accompanying and/or promoting the rapid postnatal improvement of the thermogenic efficiency of shivering were investigated in piglets. Animals were obtained at birth or killed after 5 days at thermoneutrality (34-30 degrees C) or in the cold (24-15 degrees C), to stimulate intense shivering thermogenesis. Fast-twitch-glycolytic (longissimus lumborum) and slow-twitch-oxidative (rhomboid) muscles were prepared for electron microscopic examination and chemical measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
April 2001
The control of hepatic metabolism by substrates and hormones was assessed in perfused liver from young Muscovy ducklings. Studies were performed in fed or 24-h fasted 5-week-old thermoneutral (25 degrees C; TN) or cold-acclimated ducklings (4 degrees C; CA) and results were compared with those obtained in rats. Basal oxygen uptake of perfused liver (LVO2) was higher after cold acclimation both in fed (+65%) and 24-h fasted (+29%) ducklings and in 24-h fasted rats (+34%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
December 1999
The effect of long-term hindlimb unloading (2 or 5 week) on the expression of uncoupling protein-3 (UCP3) gene was investigated in rat skeletal muscles. The interaction of hindlimb unloading and thyroid status was also investigated at 2 weeks. Whatever the duration, mechanical unloading induced a similar increase in UCP3 mRNA relative abundance in the slow-twitch soleus (SOL) muscle (+80%, P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe control of uncoupling protein-1, -2 and -3 (UCP-1, UCP-2, UCP-3) mRNA levels by sympathetic innervation in rats was investigated by specific and sensitive RT-PCR assays. In rats reared at thermoneutrality (25 degrees C), unilateral surgical sympathetic denervation of interscapular brown adipose tissue (BAT) markedly reduced the UCP-1 mRNA level (-38%) as compared with the contralateral innervated BAT pad, but was without significant effect on UCP-2 and -3 mRNA levels. Cold exposure (7 days, 4 degrees C) markedly increased UCP-1 (+180%), UCP-2 (+115%) and UCP-3 (+195%) mRNA levels in interscapular BAT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Cell Endocrinol
September 1998
The influence of thyroid status on glucagon receptor mRNA levels was investigated in rats using a semi-quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay. Glucagon receptor mRNA was detected in liver, brown and white adipose tissues (BAT and WAT) and brain. In BAT and WAT, pharmacologically-induced moderate hypothyroidism resulted in a marked reduction in the relative abundance of glucagon receptor mRNA.
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