OBJECTIVEBrown adipose tissue (BAT) is present in adult humans where it may be important in the prevention of obesity, although the main factors regulating its abundance are not well established. BAT demonstrates seasonal variation relating to ambient temperature and photoperiod in mammals. The objective of our study was therefore to determine whether seasonal variation in BAT activity in humans was more closely related to the prevailing photoperiod or temperature.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSWe studied 3,614 consecutive patients who underwent positron emission tomography followed by computed tomography scans. The presence and location of BAT depots were documented and correlated with monthly changes in photoperiod and ambient temperature.RESULTSBAT activity was demonstrated in 167 (4.6%) scans. BAT was demonstrated in 52/724 scans (7.2%) in winter compared with 27/1,067 (2.5%) in summer months (P < 0.00001, χ2 test). Monthly changes in the occurrence of BAT were more closely related to differences in photoperiod (r2 = 0.876) rather than ambient temperature (r2 = 0.696). Individuals with serial scans also demonstrated strong seasonal variation in BAT activity (average standardized uptake value [SUVmax] 1.5 in July and 9.4 in January). BAT was also more common in female patients (female: n = 107, 7.2%; male: n = 60, 2.8%; P < 0.00001, χ2 test).CONCLUSIONSOur study demonstrates a very strong seasonal variation in the presence of BAT. This effect is more closely associated with photoperiod than ambient temperature, suggesting a previously undescribed mechanism for mediating BAT function in humans that could now potentially be recruited for the prevention or reversal of obesity.
The secretion of many hormones, including oxytocin, vasopressin and growth hormone, is not constant but shows a day-night rhythm. The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is thought to generate most mammalian biological rhythms and previous studies have reported suprachiasmatic efferents to the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and the supraoptic nucleus (SON). We used in vivo extracellular electrophysiological techniques to show that the SCN also sends direct and indirect neural projections to the arcuate nucleus (ARC). This projection consisted of both excitatory and inhibitory components and may contribute to the entrainment of the rhythm in growth hormone secretion to the day-night cycle. Some SCN neurones appear to project to both the SON and the ARC. The SCN in turn receives excitatory and inhibitory inputs from the ARC and the peri-nuclear zone of the SON (peri-SON), which may provide feedback information, as well as allowing nonphotic entrainment of the SCN, for example, in response to feeding. Our data thus suggest extensive two-way connections between the SCN and its target nuclei which may contribute to the generation of day-night neuroendocrine rhythms. They also suggest the existence of indirect retinal projections to the ARC and PVN. We further investigated the retinal projection to the SCN. We were unable to demonstrate a significant difference in retinal input to those suprachiasmatic cells which had efferent projections to particular hypothalamic targets (SON and/or ARC), and those which did not.
It will be important to review the long-term results of larger trials.
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