Samples of adipose tissue were obtained from different sites in bovine and ovine foetuses and newborns. RNA was isolated and analysed using bovine cDNA and ovine genomic probe for uncoupling protein (UCP), cDNA for subunits III and IV of cytochrome c oxidase and cDNA for ADP/ATP carrier. UCP mRNA was characterized for the first time in foetal bovine and ovine adipose tissue. It appeared later than mRNA of cytochrome c oxidase subunit III, and increased dramatically at birth (10-fold). ADP/ATP carrier mRNA was expressed at a lower level but also increased 10-fold at birth. It was demonstrated that UCP mRNA reached its highest level at birth in all bovine adipose tissues studied, except subcutaneous tissue. It disappeared quickly afterwards, being no longer detectable two days after birth. Similar variations were observed in newborn lambs. ADP/ATP carrier mRNA showed the same pattern of expression as UCP mRNA; although it was still lightly expressed two days after birth, it disappeared soon afterwards. Only mRNAs for cytochrome c oxidase subunits III and IV remained at the same level during the first postnatal week. On the basis of these data and of observations reported in the literature a sequence of events for the development of brown adipose cells in vivo is proposed. Soon after birth the perirenal adipose tissue of ruminants, which still contains mitochondria of typical brown adipose tissue morphology and high levels of cytochrome c oxidase mRNA, lacks UCP mRNA. Can it still be considered as brown fat? Ruminant species appear to be attractive models to study both the differentiation of brown adipose tissue and its possible conversion to white fat in large animals.
Development changes in the content of the mitochondrial-uncoupling protein (UCP) have been studied in adipose depots of bovine fetuses and a newborn calf as well as in adipose depots of newborn and aging lambs. The occurrence of UCP unique to brown adipose tissue (BAT) was investigated by GDP binding, photoaffinity labeling with 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate, and immunoblots using specific antibodies directed against rat UCP. A protein of 32,000 relative molecular weight was characterized in both species with properties similar to those of rodent UCP. In bovine, UCP became detectable in the perirenal adipose tissue at day -80 and its content increased until birth. Both in bovine (perirenal, subscapular, and retroperitoneal sites) and in ovine (perirenal, subscapular, retroperitoneal, and pericardiac sites), all adipose tissues except the subcutaneous adipose tissue contained at birth UCP and thus can be considered as BAT. The data indicate that the perirenal adipose depot should play in bovine and ovine a major thermogenic role at birth, whereas perirenal and pericardiac adipose tissues of lambs held under cold conditions for 45 days after birth did not show any immunoreactive UCP.
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