Papers In Press, published online ahead of print September 25, 2001
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M105658200
Submitted on June 19, 2001
Revised on September 13, 2001
Accepted on September 25, 2001
Brown fat UCP1 is specifically expressed in uterine longitudinal smooth muscle cells
Maryse Nibbelink, Karine Moulin, Emmanuelle Arnaud, Carine Duval, Luc Pénicaud, and Louis Casteilla
UMR CNRS 5018, IFR31, Toulouse 31400
Corresponding Author: casteil{at}rangueil.inserm.fr
Until now, Uncoupling Protein 1 (UCP1) was considered as unique to brown adipocytes. It supports a highly regulated uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation that is associated with diet as well as with non-shivering thermogenesis. Here we report that UCP1 is not specific to brown adipocytes and can be expressed in longitudinal smooth muscle layers. In uterus, this conclusion was drawn from different convergent data. A specific antibody against mouse UCP1 revealed, in mitochondrial fractions, a protein with the same molecular weight as brown fat UCP1. Sensitive and specific RT-PCR detected a mRNA whose sequence was totally homologous to that of brown fat UCP1 mRNA. Antibody against UCP1 as well as a UCP1 antisense probe specifically stained uterine longitudinal smooth muscles. UCP1 was also expressed in longitudinal smooth muscle of digestive and male reproductive tracts but was never expressed in other types of smooth muscle, including those of arterial vessels. In uterine tract, UCP1 content was increased after cold exposure or b-adrenergic agonist treatment. It was also up-regulated during the post-ovulatory period after sexual cycle synchronization. Its content transiently increased during gestation and decreased markedly after birth. These regulations strongly argue about a role for UCP1 in thermogenesis as well as in relaxation of longitudinal smooth muscle layers.