Abstract
Brown adipocytes have the ability to uncouple the respiratory chain in mitochondria and dissipate chemical energy as heat. Development of UCP1-positive brown adipocytes in white adipose tissues (so called beige or brite cells) is highly induced by a variety of environmental cues such as chronic cold exposure or by PPARγ agonists, therefore, this cell type has potential as a therapeutic target for obesity treatment. Although most immortalized adipocyte lines cannot recapitulate the process of "browning" of white fat in culture, primary adipocytes isolated from stromal vascular fraction in subcutaneous white adipose tissue (WAT) provide a reliable cellular system to study the molecular control of beige/brite cell development. Here we describe a protocol for effective isolation of primary preadipocytes and for inducing differentiation to beige/brite cells in culture. The browning effect can be assessed by the expression of brown fat-selective markers such as UCP1.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e50191 |
Journal | Journal of Visualized Experiments |
Issue number | 73 |
ISSN | 1940-087X |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2013 |
Keywords
- Adipocytes
- Adipose tissue
- Anatomy
- Animal model
- Beige/brite cells
- Brown adipose tissue
- Cell Differentiation
- Cells
- Cellular biology
- Diabetes
- Differentiation
- Fat
- Isolation
- Issue 73
- Medicine
- Molecular biology
- Obesity
- Physiology
- Primary adipocytes
- Rosiglitazone
- Stromal-vascular fraction
- Surgery
- Transcription factors
- Uncoupling protein 1