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Cold-induced expression of a truncated adenylyl cyclase 3 acts as rheostat to brown fat function.

Sajjad KhaniHande TopelRonja KardinalAna Rita TavanezAjeetha JosephrajanBjørk Ditlev Marcher LarsenMichael James GaudryPhilipp LeyendeckerNadia Meincke EgedalAylin Seren GüllerNatasa StanicPhillip M M RuppertIsabella GazianoNils Rouven HansmeierElena SchmidtPaul KlemmLara-Marie VaglianoRainer StahlFraser DuthieJens-Henning KrauseAna BiciChristoph Andreas EngelhardSabrina GohlkePeter FrommoltThorsten GnadÁlvaro Rada-IglesiasMarta Pradas-JuniTim Julius SchulzFrank Thomas WunderlichAlexander PfeiferAlexander BarteltMartin JastrochDagmar WachtenJan-Wilhelm Kornfeld
Published in: Nature metabolism (2024)
Promoting brown adipose tissue (BAT) activity innovatively targets obesity and metabolic disease. While thermogenic activation of BAT is well understood, the rheostatic regulation of BAT to avoid excessive energy dissipation remains ill-defined. Here, we demonstrate that adenylyl cyclase 3 (AC3) is key for BAT function. We identified a cold-inducible promoter that generates a 5' truncated AC3 mRNA isoform (Adcy3-at), whose expression is driven by a cold-induced, truncated isoform of PPARGC1A (PPARGC1A-AT). Male mice lacking Adcy3-at display increased energy expenditure and are resistant to obesity and ensuing metabolic imbalances. Mouse and human AC3-AT are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum, unable to translocate to the plasma membrane and lack enzymatic activity. AC3-AT interacts with AC3 and sequesters it in the endoplasmic reticulum, reducing the pool of adenylyl cyclases available for G-protein-mediated cAMP synthesis. Thus, AC3-AT acts as a cold-induced rheostat in BAT, limiting adverse consequences of cAMP activity during chronic BAT activation.
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