doi:10.1369/jhc.6A7013.2006
Volume 55 (2): 183-189, 2007 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Thymus Uncoupling Protein 1 Is Exclusive to Typical Brown Adipocytes and Is Not Found in Thymocytes
Institute of Normal Human Morphology, Marche Polytechnic University, Ancona, Italy (AF,CZ,SC), and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Unit 9078, Université ParisDescartes, Faculté de Medicine, Site Necker, Paris, France (SR,A-MC-D,DR) Correspondence to: Saverio Cinti, MD, Institute of Normal Human Morphology, Marche Polytechnic University, Via Tronto, 10/A, 60020 Ancona, Italy. E-mail: cinti{at}univpm.it
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 reinvestigated 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. (J Histochem Cytochem 55:183189, 2007)
Key Words: UCP1 thymus brown adipose tissue immunohistochemistry cold exposure rat
NON-SHIVERING THERMOGENESIS in rodents, newborns, and arousing hibernators is largely explained by a regulated uncoupling of respiration occurring in the brown adipocytes, forming brown adipose tissue (BAT) depots. Thermogenesis in these cells is activated by the central nervous system via the sympathetic fibers that directly innervate them (Giordano et al. 1996
Animals and Tissues Four-week-old male and female Wistar rats (75100 g) and 4-month-old rats (225375 g) were obtained from Charles River Italia (Lecco, Italy). They were caged singly and randomly assigned to different experimental groups. Three 4-week-old males and three females were acclimated at 6C for 8 days, whereas six age- and sex-matched rats (control group) were kept at room temperature (22C) for 8 days before sacrifice. During cold adaptation, the cages were cleaned every other day. Four-month-old Wistar rats (three males and three females) were kept at room temperature. Finally, we used three 2-month-old adult and three 6-day-old newborn wild-type C57BL-6J mice. Animals were treated and experimental procedures were performed according to protocols approved by the Marche Polytechnic University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. For immunohistochemical studies, rats and mice were anesthetized with 100 mg/kg ketamine (Ketavet; Aprilia, Italy) in combination with 19 mg/kg xylazine (Rompum; Bayer AG,Leverkusen, Germany) and transcardially perfused with 4% formaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.4. Several tissues were carefully dissected under a surgical microscope (thymus, BAT, white adipose tissue, spleen, liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, intestine, stomach, and uterus) and postfixed by overnight immersion in the same fixative at 4C. After a brief wash in PB, they were dehydrated with gradual steps of ethanol, cleared in xylene for 2 x 60 min, and then paraffin embedded overnight at 60C. The next day, after two paraffin changes, tissues were orientated in embedding mold. For immunofluorescence and confocal microscopic analysis, animals were perfused as described above and tissues were postfixed by overnight immersion. After a brief wash in PB, they were cryoprotected in a solution of 30% sucrose in PB for 24 hr at 4C. A glass beaker containing 2-methylbutane (isopentane) was cooled in liquid nitrogen, and specimens were embedded in optimal cutting temperature medium (OCT, Tissue-Tek; Sakura Finetek Europe, The Netherlands), frozen, and stored at 80C.
Immunohistochemistry
Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy
In agreement with the observations of Carroll et al. (2005)
Light microscopic analysis of thymuses from rats (Figures 2A, 2C, and 2D) and mice (Figure 2B) clearly evidenced a significant amount of BAT around the gland, especially in the area closest to its parenchyma, despite their careful dissection. Immunohistochemical analysis of UCP1 in these sections revealed intense reactivity only in brown adipocytes, whereas the parenchyma was consistently negative. Given that UCP1 expression increases after cold exposure, thymuses from cold-exposed rats were also analyzed. All were negative for UCP1 (Figures 2C and 2D). A varying amount of BAT was present in all sections, yielding intense UCP1-positive reactions in brown adipocytes. For a more exhaustive investigation of the UCP1 immunoreactivity of the gland, immunohistochemical experiments were conducted at different section levels of the thymus, and the slides were examined at the highest magnification allowed by the microscope (x100). Again, thymocytes displayed a consistently negative signal (Figure 2D, upper right corner), whereas brown adipocytes exhibited strongly positive reactions (Figure 2D, left-hand side). Gastrointestinal tract organs and uterus were also investigated and found to be negative (Figures 1C and 1E). Similarly, white adipose tissue, skeletal muscle, liver, pancreas, spleen, ovary, and kidney from cold-acclimated rats gave negative results (Figures 1B1E), whereas strong UCP1 immunoreactivity was observed in BAT from the same animals (Figures 1A1F). Further confirmation of these results was sought by double labeling of thymocytes and observing them under a confocal microscope. Similar results were obtained from both cold-acclimated (Figure 3 ) and control animals. Thymocytes, labeled by Thy-1 (Figure 3A, green stain), were always negative for UCP1. On the same histological section, BAT surrounding the thymus was intensely positive (Figure 3B, red stain). Merging of the two images (Figure 3C) confirmed that the two proteins do not colocalize. Further analysis of several histological preparations at higher magnification failed to evidence UCP1 in thymocytes.
Despite the broad consensus on the unique expression of mitochondrial UCP1 in brown adipocytes, in relation to their specific ability to perform regulatory thermogenesis, its presence in organs or tissues where it has never been sought cannot, of course, be ruled out.Several studies have conclusively demonstrated that UCP1 is not found in spleen or in the immune system (Jacobsson et al. 1985
In the present work, Western blot analysis of mitochondria isolated from the thymus of cold-exposed and control rats did evidence a varyingly small amount of UCP1. For these experiments we used a large amount of thymus protein (up to 300-fold the amount allowing UCP1 detection in BAT). Our findings agree with those of Carroll et al. (2005)
Immunohistochemistry is the most widely used technique to establish protein expression in situ and allows the identification of the immunoreactive cell type in tissues. UCP1 antibody used in our immunohistochemical experiments can detect UCP1 in the mitochondria of brown adipocytes even at a dilution of 1:10,000 in paraffin blocks (Cancello et al. 1998 In conclusion, the present findings confirm that UCP1 is uniquely expressed in brown adipocytes and show that any UCP1 signal detected in thymus is accounted for by the brown adipocytes that remain attached to the thymus even after careful dissection. Whether brown adipocytes adjacent to thymic lobes play a role in thymus physiology remains to be investigated. At least for the present time the search for a role for UCP1 in thymocytes can thus be called off.
This work was supported by the Italian Ministry of Research (Grant No. FIRB-2001 to SC), the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France), and the EU (Grant ECFP6 "Diabesity" Contract No. LSHM-CT-2003-503041 to DR).
Received for publication May 10, 2006; accepted October 25, 2006
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