Temperature and species-dependent regulation of browning in retrobulbar fat

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作者
Fatemeh Rajaii
Dong Won Kim
Jianbo Pan
Nicholas R. Mahoney
Charles G. Eberhart
Jiang Qian
Seth Blackshaw
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Ophthalmology, Wilmer Eye Institute
[2] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience
[3] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
[4] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Neurology
[5] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Institute for Cell Engineering
[6] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Kavli Neuroscience Discovery Institute
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Retrobulbar fat deposits surround the posterior retina and optic nerve head, but their function and origin are obscure. We report that mouse retrobulbar fat is a neural crest-derived tissue histologically and transcriptionally resembles interscapular brown fat. In contrast, human retrobulbar fat closely resembles white adipose tissue. Retrobulbar fat is also brown in other rodents, which are typically housed at temperatures below thermoneutrality, but is white in larger animals. We show that retrobulbar fat in mice housed at thermoneutral temperature show reduced expression of the brown fat marker Ucp1, and histological properties intermediate between white and brown fat. We conclude that retrobulbar fat can potentially serve as a site of active thermogenesis, that this capability is both temperature and species-dependent, and that this may facilitate regulation of intraocular temperature.
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