A chemical signal that promotes insect survival via thermogenesis.
Lilin ZhaoJiao ZhouJunxian ChenXue-Ying ZhangHongxia ZhangLu GuoDe-Feng LiJing NingXinchen WangWanzhu JinKevin MaiElijah AbrahamRebecca A ButcherJiang-Hua SunPublished in: Research square (2023)
Cold-activated thermogenesis of brown adipose tissues (BAT) is vital for the survival of animals under cold stress and also inhibits the development of tumours. The development of small-molecule tools that target thermogenesis pathways could lead to novel therapies against cold, obesity, and even cancer. Here, we identify a chemical signal that is produced in beetles in the winter to activate fat thermogenesis. This hormone elevates the basal body temperature by increasing cellular mitochondrial density and uncoupling in order to promote beetle survival. We demonstrate that this hormone activates UCP4-mediated uncoupled respiration through adipokinetic hormone receptor (AKHR). This signal serves as a novel fat-burning activator that utilizes a conserved mechanism to promote thermogenesis not only in beetles, nematode and flies, but also in mice, protecting the mice against cold and tumor growth. This hormone represents a new strategy to manipulate fat thermogenesis.