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Submitted on July 20, 2006
Accepted on November 25, 2006
Research Center, Ste-Justine Hospital, Montréal, Québec, H3T 1C5 Canada; Faculty of Pharmacy, Pavillon Jean-Coutu, University of Montreal, Montréal, Québec, H3C 3J7 Canada; Departments of Biochemistry, and Obstetrics & Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, Montréal, Québec, H3T 1C5 Canada
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: andre.tremblay{at}recherche-ste-justine.qc.ca.
While the uptake of oxidized lipoproteins by scavenger receptor CD36 in macrophages has been associated with foam cell formation and atherogenesis, little is known about the role of CD36 in regulating lipid metabolism in adipocytes. Here, we report that treatment of 3T3-L1 adipocytes with hexarelin, a growth-hormone releasing peptide that interacts with CD36, resulted in a depletion of intracellular lipid content with no significant change in CD36 expression. Microarray analysis revealed an increased pattern in several genes involved in fatty acid mobilization toward the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation process in response to hexarelin. Interestingly, many of these upregulated genes are known targets of PPAR
, such as FATP, CPT-1 and F1-ATPase, suggesting that adipocyte response to hexarelin may involve PPAR
activation. Expression studies also indicate an increase in thermogenic markers PGC-1
and UCP1, which are normally expressed in brown adipocytes. Electron microscopy of hexarelin-treated 3T3-L1 adipocytes showed an intense and highly organized cristae formation that spans the entire width of mitochondria compared with untreated cells, and cytochrome c oxidase activity was enhanced by hexarelin, two features characteristic of highly oxidative tissues. A similar mitochondrial phenotype was detected in epididymal white fat of mice treated with hexarelin, along with an increased expression of thermogenic markers that was lost in treated CD36-null mice, suggesting that the ability of hexarelin to promote a brown fat-like phenotype also occurs in vivo and is dependent on CD36. These results provide a potential role for CD36 to impact the overall metabolic activity of fat usage and mitochondrial biogenesis in adipocytes.
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