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Accumulation of succinate controls activation of adipose tissue thermogenesis.

Citation
Mills, E. L., et al. “Accumulation Of Succinate Controls Activation Of Adipose Tissue Thermogenesis.”. Nature, pp. 102-106.
Author Evanna L Mills, Kerry A Pierce, Mark P Jedrychowski, Ryan Garrity, Sally Winther, Sara Vidoni, Takeshi Yoneshiro, Jessica B Spinelli, Gina Z Lu, Lawrence Kazak, Alexander S Banks, Marcia C Haigis, Shingo Kajimura, Michael P Murphy, Steven P Gygi, Clary B Clish, Edward T Chouchani
Abstract

Thermogenesis by brown and beige adipose tissue, which requires activation by external stimuli, can counter metabolic disease. Thermogenic respiration is initiated by adipocyte lipolysis through cyclic AMP-protein kinase A signalling; this pathway has been subject to longstanding clinical investigation. Here we apply a comparative metabolomics approach and identify an independent metabolic pathway that controls acute activation of adipose tissue thermogenesis in vivo. We show that substantial and selective accumulation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediate succinate is a metabolic signature of adipose tissue thermogenesis upon activation by exposure to cold. Succinate accumulation occurs independently of adrenergic signalling, and is sufficient to elevate thermogenic respiration in brown adipocytes. Selective accumulation of succinate may be driven by a capacity of brown adipocytes to sequester elevated circulating succinate. Furthermore, brown adipose tissue thermogenesis can be initiated by systemic administration of succinate in mice. Succinate from the extracellular milieu is rapidly metabolized by brown adipocytes, and its oxidation by succinate dehydrogenase is required for activation of thermogenesis. We identify a mechanism whereby succinate dehydrogenase-mediated oxidation of succinate initiates production of reactive oxygen species, and drives thermogenic respiration, whereas inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase supresses thermogenesis. Finally, we show that pharmacological elevation of circulating succinate drives UCP1-dependent thermogenesis by brown adipose tissue in vivo, which stimulates robust protection against diet-induced obesity and improves glucose tolerance. These findings reveal an unexpected mechanism for control of thermogenesis, using succinate as a systemically-derived thermogenic molecule.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Nature
Volume
560
Issue
7716
Number of Pages
102-106
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1476-4687
DOI
10.1038/s41586-018-0353-2
Alternate Journal
Nature
PMID
30022159
PMCID
PMC7045287
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