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      A Creatine-Driven Substrate Cycle Enhances Energy Expenditure and Thermogenesis in Beige Fat

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          SUMMARY

          Thermogenic brown and beige adipose tissues dissipate chemical energy as heat, and their thermogenic activities can combat obesity and diabetes. Herein the functional adaptations to cold of brown and beige adipose depots are examined using quantitative mitochondrial proteomics. We identify arginine/creatine metabolism as a beige adipose signature and demonstrate that creatine enhances respiration in beige fat mitochondria when ADP is limiting. In murine beige fat, cold exposure stimulates mitochondrial Creatine Kinase activity and induces coordinated expression of genes associated with creatine metabolism. Pharmacological reduction of creatine levels decreases whole body energy expenditure after administration of a β3-agonist and reduces the adipose metabolic rate. Genes of creatine metabolism are compensatorily induced when UCP1-dependent thermogenesis is ablated, and creatine reduction in Ucp1-deficient mice reduces core body temperature. These findings link a futile cycle of creatine metabolism to adipose tissue energy expenditure and thermal homeostasis.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0413066
          2830
          Cell
          Cell
          Cell
          0092-8674
          1097-4172
          6 November 2015
          22 October 2015
          22 October 2015
          22 October 2016
          : 163
          : 3
          : 643-655
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA 02115, USA
          [2 ]Department of Cell Biology, Harvard University Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA
          [3 ]Diabetes Center, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco, California, USA
          [4 ]Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA 02215, USA
          Author notes
          Article
          PMC4656041 PMC4656041 4656041 nihpa730272
          10.1016/j.cell.2015.09.035
          4656041
          26496606
          29e483e5-7372-479b-baff-10349a4d7c1e
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