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Mitochondrial lipoylation integrates age-associated decline in brown fat thermogenesis.


ABSTRACT: Thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue (BAT) declines with age; however, what regulates this process remains poorly understood. Here, we identify mitochondria lipoylation as a previously unappreciated molecular hallmark of aged BAT in mice. Using mitochondrial proteomics, we show that mitochondrial lipoylation is disproportionally reduced in aged BAT through a post-transcriptional decrease in the iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster formation pathway. A defect in the Fe-S cluster formation by the fat-specific deletion of Bola3 significantly reduces mitochondrial lipoylation and fuel oxidation in BAT, leading to glucose intolerance and obesity. In turn, enhanced mitochondrial lipoylation by ?-lipoic acid supplementation effectively restores BAT function in old mice, thereby preventing age-associated obesity and glucose intolerance. The effect of ?-lipoic acids requires mitochondrial lipoylation via the Bola3 pathway and does not depend on the anti-oxidant activity of ?-lipoic acid. These results open up the possibility to alleviate the age-associated decline in energy expenditure by enhancing the mitochondrial lipoylation pathway.

SUBMITTER: Tajima K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7169975 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Mitochondrial lipoylation integrates age-associated decline in brown fat thermogenesis.

Tajima Kazuki K   Ikeda Kenji K   Chang Hsin-Yi HY   Chang Chih-Hsiang CH   Yoneshiro Takeshi T   Oguri Yasuo Y   Jun Heejin H   Wu Jun J   Ishihama Yasushi Y   Kajimura Shingo S  

Nature metabolism 20190916 9


Thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue (BAT) declines with age; however, what regulates this process remains poorly understood. Here, we identify mitochondria lipoylation as a previously unappreciated molecular hallmark of aged BAT in mice. Using mitochondrial proteomics, we show that mitochondrial lipoylation is disproportionally reduced in aged BAT through a post-transcriptional decrease in the iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster formation pathway. A defect in the Fe-S cluster formation by the fat-speci  ...[more]

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