bims-mimbat Biomed News
on Mitochondrial metabolism in brown adipose tissue
Issue of 2025–04–20
ten papers selected by
José Carlos de Lima-Júnior, Washington University



  1. Cell Chem Biol. 2025 Apr 17. pii: S2451-9456(25)00097-2. [Epub ahead of print]32(4): 620-630.e6
      Mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) is one of the key parameters controlling cellular bioenergetics. Investigation of the role of ΔΨm in live cells is complicated by a lack of tools for its direct manipulation without off-target effects. Here, we adopted the uncoupling protein UCP1 from brown adipocytes as a genetically encoded tool for direct manipulation of ΔΨm. We validated the ability of exogenously expressed UCP1 to induce uncoupled respiration and lower ΔΨm in mammalian cells. UCP1 expression lowered ΔΨm to the same extent as chemical uncouplers but did not inhibit cell proliferation, suggesting that it manipulates ΔΨm without the off-target effects of chemical uncouplers. Using UCP1, we revealed that elevated ΔΨm is the driver of the integrated stress response induced by ATP synthase inhibition in mammalian cells.
    Keywords:  ATP synthase inhibition; GEMMs; ISR; UCP1; genetically encoded tools for manipulation of metabolism; integrated stress response,; mitochondrial membrane potential; ΔΨm
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2025.03.007
  2. Nat Metab. 2025 Apr 15.
      Psychological stress changes both behaviour and metabolism to protect organisms. Adrenaline is an important driver of this response. Anxiety correlates with circulating free fatty acid levels and can be alleviated by a peripherally restricted β-blocker, suggesting a peripheral signal linking metabolism with behaviour. Here we show that adrenaline, the β3 agonist CL316,243 and acute restraint stress induce growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) secretion in white adipose tissue of mice. Genetic inhibition of adipose triglyceride lipase or genetic deletion of β-adrenergic receptors blocks β-adrenergic-induced increases in GDF15. Increases in circulating GDF15 require lipolysis-induced free fatty acid stimulation of M2-like macrophages within white adipose tissue. Anxiety-like behaviour elicited by adrenaline or restraint stress is eliminated in mice lacking the GDF15 receptor GFRAL. These data provide molecular insights into the mechanisms linking metabolism and behaviour and suggest that inhibition of GDF15-GFRAL signalling might reduce acute anxiety.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-025-01264-3
  3. Sci Adv. 2025 Apr 18. 11(16): eadw1489
      The mitochondrial pyruvate carrier transports pyruvate, produced by glycolysis from sugar molecules, into the mitochondrial matrix, as a crucial transport step in eukaryotic energy metabolism. The carrier is a drug target for the treatment of cancers, diabetes mellitus, neurodegeneration, and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease. We have solved the structure of the human MPC1L/MPC2 heterodimer in the inward- and outward-open states by cryo-electron microscopy, revealing its alternating access rocker-switch mechanism. The carrier has a central binding site for pyruvate, which contains an essential lysine and histidine residue, important for its ΔpH-dependent transport mechanism. We have also determined the binding poses of three chemically distinct inhibitor classes, which exploit the same binding site in the outward-open state by mimicking pyruvate interactions and by using aromatic stacking interactions.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adw1489
  4. Mol Metab. 2025 Apr 11. pii: S2212-8778(25)00060-2. [Epub ahead of print] 102153
      Defective activity of brown adipose tissue (BAT) is linked to obesity and cardiometabolic diseases. While much is known regarding the biological signals that trigger BAT thermogenesis, relatively little is known about the repressors that may impair BAT function in physiological and pathological settings. Acyl CoA-binding protein (ACBP; also known as diazepam binding inhibitor, DBI) has intracellular functions related to lipid metabolism and can be secreted to act as a circulating regulatory factor that affects multiple tissues and organs. Here, we report that ACBP expression and release in BAT are suppressed by noradrenergic cAMP-dependent signals that stimulate thermogenesis. This regulation occurs through gene expression modulation and autophagy-related processes. Mice with targeted ablation of Acbp in brown adipocytes exhibit enhanced BAT thermogenic activity and protection against high-fat diet-induced obesity and glucose intolerance; this is associated with BAT transcriptome changes, including upregulation of BAT thermogenesis-related genes. Treatment of brown adipocytes with exogenous ACBP suppresses oxidative activity, lipolysis, and thermogenesis-related gene expression. ACBP treatment inhibits the noradrenergic-induced phosphorylation of p38 MAP kinase and CREB, which are major intracellular mediators of brown adipocyte thermogenesis. Our findings collectively identify the ACBP system as a crucial auto-regulatory repressor of BAT thermogenesis that responds reciprocally to the noradrenergic induction of BAT activity.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2025.102153
  5. Trends Biochem Sci. 2025 Apr 15. pii: S0968-0004(25)00060-X. [Epub ahead of print]
      Lipids are emerging as functional players in mitochondrial protein import beyond constituting membranes. Cryo-electron microscopy structures of protein translocases such as translocase of the outer membrane (TOM) and insertases such as translocase of the inner membrane (TIM22) link lipids to protein import by suggesting structural and functional roles for lipids in protein translocation and insertion, and for protein insertases in lipid scrambling.
    Keywords:  membrane complexes; mitochondrial biology; mitochondrial protein import; protein–lipid interactions
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tibs.2025.03.011
  6. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Apr 22. 122(16): e2421953122
      Mitochondria are dynamic organelles that constantly change morphology. What controls mitochondrial morphology however remains unresolved. Using actively respiring yeast cells growing in distinct carbon sources, we find that mitochondrial morphology and activity are unrelated. Cells can exhibit fragmented or networked mitochondrial morphology in different nutrient environments independent of mitochondrial activity. Instead, mitochondrial morphology is controlled by the intracellular redox state, which itself depends on the nature of electron entry into the electron transport chain (ETC)-through complex I/II or directly to coenzyme Q/cytochrome c. In metabolic conditions where direct electron entry is high, reactive oxygen species (ROS) increase, resulting in an oxidized cytosolic environment and rapid mitochondrial fragmentation. Decreasing direct electron entry into the ETC by genetic or chemical means, or reducing the cytosolic environment rapidly restores networked morphologies. Using controlled disruptions of electron flow to alter ROS and redox state, we demonstrate minute-scale, reversible control between networked and fragmented forms in an activity-independent manner. Mechanistically, the fission machinery through Dnm1 responds in minute-scale to redox state changes, preceding the change in mitochondrial form. Thus, the metabolic state of the cell and its consequent cellular redox state actively control mitochondrial form.
    Keywords:  electron transport chain; mitochondrial network; reactive oxygen species; redox state
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2421953122
  7. Nat Metab. 2025 Apr 18.
      The immunoregulatory metabolite itaconate accumulates in innate immune cells upon Toll-like receptor stimulation. In response to macrophage activation by lipopolysaccharide, itaconate inhibits inflammasome activation and boosts type I interferon signalling; however, the molecular mechanism of this immunoregulation remains unclear. Here, we show that the enhancement of type I interferon secretion by itaconate depends on the inhibition of peroxiredoxin 5 and on mitochondrial reactive oxygen species. We find that itaconate non-covalently inhibits peroxiredoxin 5, leading to the modulation of mitochondrial peroxide in activating macrophages. Through genetic manipulation, we confirm that peroxiredoxin 5 modulates type I interferon secretion in macrophages. The non-electrophilic itaconate mimetic 2-methylsuccinate inhibits peroxiredoxin 5 and phenocopies immunoregulatory action of itaconate on type I interferon and inflammasome activation, providing further support for a non-covalent inhibition of peroxiredoxin 5 by itaconate. Our work provides insight into the molecular mechanism of actions and biological rationale for the predominantly immune specification of itaconate.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-025-01275-0
  8. J Cell Sci. 2025 Apr 14. pii: jcs.263665. [Epub ahead of print]
      The mechanistic links between mechanical forces and bioenergetics remain elusive. We report an increase in mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) along the leading row of collectively migrating Xenopus laevis mesendoderm cells at sites where fibronectin- a5b1 integrin substrate traction stresses are greatest. Real-time metabolic analyses reveal a5b1 integrin-dependent increases in respiration efficiency in cells on fibronectin substrates. Elevation of metabolic activity is reduced following pharmacologic inhibition of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) signaling. Attachment of mesendoderm cells to fibronectin fragments that support differing a5b1 integrin conformational and ligand-binding affinity states, increases MMP when both the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) and Pro-Pro-Ser-Arg-Asn (PPSRN) synergy sites of fibronectin are engaged by the receptor. Cell stretch on deformable fibronectin substrates also results in a FAK-dependent increase in MMP. Inhibition of MMP or ATP-synthase activity slows collective cell migration velocity in vivo, further suggesting that integrin-dependent adhesion and signaling contribute to metabolic changes. These data highlight an underexplored link between ECM-integrin adhesion and metabolic activity in embryonic cell migration. We propose that fibronectin-integrin adhesion and signaling help shape the metabolic landscape of collectively migrating cells.
    Keywords:  Adhesion; Cell migration; Extracellular matrix; Integrin; Mitochondria; Morphogenesis
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.263665
  9. Cell Metab. 2025 Apr 09. pii: S1550-4131(25)00207-4. [Epub ahead of print]
      Hepatic insulin sensitivity is critical for systemic glucose and lipid homeostasis. The liver is spatially organized into zones in which hepatocytes express distinct metabolic enzymes; however, the functional significance of this zonation to metabolic dysregulation caused by insulin resistance is undetermined. Here, we used CreER mice to selectively disrupt insulin signaling in periportal (PP) and pericentral (PC) hepatocytes. PP-insulin resistance has been suggested to drive combined hyperglycemia and excess lipogenesis in individuals with type 2 diabetes. However, PP-insulin resistance in mice impaired lipogenesis and suppressed high-fat diet (HFD)-induced hepatosteatosis, despite elevated gluconeogenesis and insulin. In contrast, PC-insulin resistance reduced HFD-induced PC steatosis while preserving normal glucose homeostasis, in part by shifting glycolytic metabolism from the liver to the muscle. These results demonstrate distinct roles of insulin in PP versus PC hepatocytes and suggest that PC-insulin resistance might be therapeutically useful to combat hepatosteatosis without compromising glucose homeostasis.
    Keywords:  de novo lipogenesis; gluconeogenesis; hepatic glucose production; insulin resistance; insulin signaling; lipid metabolism; liver zonation; pericentral hepatocytes; periportal hepatocytes
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2025.03.015
  10. Nat Commun. 2025 Apr 16. 16(1): 3306
      The competitive advantage of mutant hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) underlies clonal hematopoiesis (CH). Drivers of CH include aging and inflammation; however, how CH-mutant cells gain a selective advantage in these contexts is an unresolved question. Using a murine model of CH (Dnmt3aR878H/+), we discover that mutant HSPCs sustain elevated mitochondrial respiration which is associated with their resistance to aging-related changes in the bone marrow microenvironment. Mutant HSPCs have DNA hypomethylation and increased expression of oxidative phosphorylation gene signatures, increased functional oxidative phosphorylation capacity, high mitochondrial membrane potential (Δψm), and greater dependence on mitochondrial respiration compared to wild-type HSPCs. Exploiting the elevated Δψm of mutant HSPCs, long-chain alkyl-TPP molecules (MitoQ, d-TPP) selectively accumulate in the mitochondria and cause reduced mitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial-driven apoptosis and ablate the competitive advantage of HSPCs ex vivo and in vivo in aged recipient mice. Further, MitoQ targets elevated mitochondrial respiration and the selective advantage of human DNMT3A-knockdown HSPCs, supporting species conservation. These data suggest that mitochondrial activity is a targetable mechanism by which CH-mutant HSPCs gain a selective advantage over wild-type HSPCs.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-57238-2