Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/238
Title: Effect of the acute crowding stress on the rat brown adipose tissue metabolic function
Authors: Đorđević, Jelena 
Cvijić, Gordana
Petrović, Nataša
Davidović, Vukosava
Keywords: Catalase;Crowding;Hypothalamus;IBAT;MAO;SOD;Stress;Thermogenesis
Issue Date: 1-Jan-2005
Journal: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology - A Molecular and Integrative Physiology
Abstract: 
Our previous results have shown that metabolic and thermal stressors influence interscapular brown adipose tissue (IBAT) metabolic activity by increasing oxygen consumption and, consequently, altering the toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and the antioxidative system activity. Since there is not enough evidence about the effect of psychosocial stressors on these processes, we studied the effect of acute crowding stress on the IBAT and hypothalamic monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity as well as IBAT antioxidative enzymes, manganese (MnSOD), copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) and catalase (CAT), as the relevant indicators of IBAT metabolic alternations under the stress exposure and the returning of animals to control conditions. The results indicated that acute crowding stress did not change the hypothalamic and IBAT MAO activities, the generation of ROS and, consequently, the IBAT CuZnSOD and CAT activities. However, all three antioxidative enzymes were affected only after the recovery period. It seems that peripheral overheating of rats during acute crowding changes the stress nature, by becoming more thermal than psychosocial and by supressing the hypothalamic efferent pathways involved in the IBAT thermogenesis regulation. However, it seems that returning of the animals to the control conditions after the stress termination causes the reactivation of IBAT thermogenesis with tendency to normalise the body temperature.
URI: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/238
ISSN: 1095-6433
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2005.09.014
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