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Metabolism

Uncoupling proteins (UCP1)

DEEntkopplungsproteine (UCP1)

Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are carrier proteins in the inner mitochondrial membrane that dissipate the proton electrochemical gradient as heat rather than ATP. UCP1, the best-characterized member, is expressed almost exclusively in brown adipose tissue (BAT), enabling non-shivering thermogenesis: activated by long-chain fatty acids from adrenergic stimulation and inhibited by purine nucleotides (GDP, ADP), UCP1 short-circuits the mitochondrial proton motive force (Cannon & Nedergaard 2004), allowing BAT to burn substrates without proportional ATP production. Beyond thermogenesis, mild mitochondrial uncoupling — including the basal proton leak present in all tissues — lowers membrane potential and reduces reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation at respiratory chain complexes I and III. This "uncoupling to survive" hypothesis links modestly reduced coupling efficiency to attenuated oxidative damage, a central driver of cellular aging. In human skeletal muscle, Amara et al. (2007, PNAS) showed that mitochondrial coupling degree — not respiration rate alone — predicts accumulation of age-related mitochondrial defects in vivo. Human BAT activity, detectable by ¹⁸F-FDG PET during cold exposure, declines markedly with age and obesity, prompting interest in pharmacological or cold-conditioning strategies to activate UCP1-mediated thermogenesis; whether such interventions extend healthspan in humans remains open, as most lifespan evidence derives from rodent models and observational human studies.

Sources

  1. Cannon B, Nedergaard J. (2004). Brown Adipose Tissue: Function and Physiological Significance. *Physiological Reviews*doi:10.1152/physrev.00015.2003
  2. Amara CE, Shankland EG, Jubrias SA, Marcinek DJ, Kushmerick MJ, Conley KE. (2007). Mild mitochondrial uncoupling impacts cellular aging in human muscles in vivo. *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences*doi:10.1073/pnas.0610131104
  3. Ricquier D, Bouillaud F. (2000). The uncoupling protein homologues: UCP1, UCP2, UCP3, StUCP and AtUCP. *Biochemical Journal*doi:10.1042/bj3450161