Thymus Uncoupling Protein 1 Is Exclusive to Typical Brown Adipocytes and Is Not Found in Thymocytes
Andrea Frontini 1, Sophie Rousset 1, Anne-Marie Cassard-Doulcier 1, Cristina Zingaretti 1, Daniel Ricquier 1 and Saverio Cinti 1*
1 Institute of Normal Human Morphology, Marche Polytechnic University, Ancona, Italy (AF,CZ,SC), and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Unit 9078, Faculté de Medicine, Université Paris-Descartes, Paris, France (SR,A-MC-D,DR)
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: cinti{at}univpm.it.
Submitted on May 10, 2006
Accepted on 25 October 2006
 |
Abstract |
|---|
A large number of studies have established the mitochondrial uncoupling protein UCP1 as a specific marker of brown adipocytes, where it controls energy dissipation of fatty acid oxidation as heat in response to physiological requirements. Following the recent report of the detection of UCP1 in thymocytes of rats and mice, we re-investigated its presence in thymus. Light microscopy and immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that the UCP1 signal in thymus is entirely explained by the presence of typical brown adipocytes around the gland. Staining for UCP1 was not observed in thymocytes. Similarly, UCP1 failed to be observed in rat spleen, skeletal muscle, stomach, intestine, or uterus, even after exposure of animals to the cold. These data confirm the specificity of UCP1 expression in the thermogenic brown adipocytes and argue against a direct role for this mitochondrial transporter in immune cells. Whether brown adipocytes adjacent to thymic lobes play a role in thymus physiology remains to be investigated.
Key Words:
UCP1, thymus, brown adipose tissue, immunohistochemistry, cold exposure, rat