This article is available online at http://www.jlr.org related chronic metabolic diseases. The natural function of BAT is to combust energy from high-caloric nutrients to defend the body against cold environments ( 4 ). The ability to burn energy-dense triglycerides as fuels for heat production could enable BAT to diminish hypertrophic white adipose tissue (WAT) depots, a prerequisite for the prevention of metabolic lifestyle diseases ( 5, 6 ). In humans, BAT activity, determined by positron emission tomographycomputed tomography (PET-CT), is positively correlated with BAT mass ( 1-3 ), BAT activation status ( 2 ), and environmental factors such as low temperatures ( 7 ). Repeated cold exposure leads to increased BAT activity ( 8, 9 ), a condition that is associated with a self-reported decrease in sensitivity to cold. The thermogenic process is dependent on the presence of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), a protein located in the inner membrane of mitochondria that is able to separate electron transport in the respiratory chain from the production of energy in the form of ATP. The heat generated by this exothermic reaction is transported via the blood circulation system to maintain body temperature ( 10 ). Low BAT activity in humans correlates with ageing and obesity ( 2, 11 ), suggesting a causal link between decreased BAT activity, weight gain, and the development of metabolic diseases. In this context, channeling fatty acids and triglycerides into BAT could attenuate deleterious effects that saturated fatty acids cause by ectopic lipid accumulation in the liver or heart . In fact, up to 90% of energy for heat production is derived from fatty acids that are delivered by triglyceriderich lipoproteins ( 4, 10, 12 ). These latter are hepatic VLDLs Abstract The endocannabinoids and their main receptor, cannabinoid type-1 (CB1), suppress intracellular cyclic AMP levels and have emerged as key players in the control of energy metabolism. CB1 agonists and blockers have been reported to infl uence the thermogenic function of white and brown adipose tissue (WAT and BAT), affecting body weight through the inhibition and stimulation of energy expenditure, respectively. The purpose of the current study was to investigate the regulation of the endocannabinoid system in WAT and BAT following exposure to either cold or specifi c agonism of  3-adrenoceptors using CL316,243 (CL), conditions known to cause BAT activation and WAT browning. To address this question, we performed quantitative PCRbased mRNA profi ling of genes important for endocannabinoid synthesis , degradation, and signaling, and determined endocannabinoid levels by LC-MS in WAT and BAT of control, cold-exposed, and CL-treated wild-type mice as well as primary brown adipocytes. Treatment with CL and exposure to cold caused an upregulation of endocannabinoid levels and biosynthetic enzymes in WAT. Acute  3-adrenoceptor activation increased endocannabinoids and a subset of genes of biosynthesis in BAT and primary brown adipocytes. We suggest that the cold-mediated ...