Brown adipose tissue and liver development during early postnatal life in hand-reared and ewe-reared lambs
CJ Darby, L Clarke, MA Lomax and ME Symonds
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
8(1) 137 - 145
Published: 1996
Abstract
This study examined the effects of modest changes in ambient temperature in hand-reared lambs (experiment one) and in ewe-reared lambs (experiment two). Lambs were killed at either 8 or 31 days of age and perirenal adipose tissue was identified as being brown adipose tissue (BAT) from measurements of thermogenic activity (i.e. GDP binding to uncoupling protein in isolated mitochondria) or thermogenic capacity (i.e. detection of uncoupling protein by immunoblotting). In addition, type I and II iodothyronine 5' monodeiodonase (5'MDI) activities were assayed in perirenal adipose tissue, plus type I 5'MDI activity in liver. Plasma samples were also taken for measurements of glucose, lactate, insulin, triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) concentrations. In experiment one, lambs were hand-reared at either warm (WR; 25 degrees C) or cool (CR; 10-15 degrees C) ambient temperatures. Mean growth rate over the first 8 days of life in CR lambs was 88 g/day and increased to 128 g/day over the first month of life. Growth rate in WR lambs was constant at 141 g/day. Thermogenic activity of BAT was significantly higher in CR than WR lambs, but total weight and tissue lipid content of perirenal adipose tissue were significantly lower in the CR group. In both WR and CR lambs, the thermogenic activity of BAT fell by an average of 71% between 8 and 31 days. At 31 days of age, uncoupling protein in mitochondria could be detected only by immunoblotting in adipose tissue sampled from CR lambs. There was no effect of ambient temperature on type I or type II 5'MDI activity in BAT or liver; it decreased in adipose but not liver tissue between 8 and 31 days of age. The plasma concentrations of glucose, insulin and T3 tended to decline with age in CR but not in WR lambs. In ewe-reared lambs perirenal adipose tissue weight and tissue lipid content more than doubled between 8 and 31 days of age, but the level of GDP binding decreased from 85 to 5 pmol/mg mitochondrial protein over this period. Liver weight increased by 55% between 8 and 31 days of age, but hepatic 5'MDI activity remained unchanged. The plasma concentrations of T3, T4 and lactate, but not glucose or insulin, increased between 8 and 31 days of age. It is concluded that hand-rearing lambs at a cool ambient temperature significantly delays postnatal development, to the extent that BAT characteristics are retained. Ewe-rearing lambs enhances the rate at which BAT adopts the characteristics of white adipose tissue, and it prevents the postnatal decline in plasma concentrations of thyroid hormones.https://doi.org/10.1071/RD9960137
© CSIRO 1996