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Thermogenesis is the process of heat production in organisms. It occurs mostly in warm-blooded animals,

Types[]

Depending on whether they are initiated through locomotion and intentional movement of the muscles, thermogenic methods can be classified as one of the following:

Shivering[]

One method to raise temperature is through shivering. It produces heat because the conversion of the chemical energy of ATP into kinetic energy causing some of the energy to show up as heat. It is not 100% efficient. No real movement is produced in shivering because opposing (antagonistic) muscle pairs are activated at the same time resulting in the shivering. An example of shivering thermogenesis is the process by which the body temperature of hibernating mammals (such as some bats, some ground squirrels, etc.) is raised as these animals "wake up" from hibernation.

Non-shivering thermogenesis[]

File:ThermogeneseAdipozyten-en.svg

Activation cascade of thermogenin in cells of brown adipose tissue

Non-shivering thermogenesis usually occurs in brown adipose tissue (brown fat) that is present in human infants, and hibernating mammals. Non-shivering thermogenesis can be obligatory or facultative. Obligatory thermogenesis is the heat production automatically caused by the metabolic rate, while facultative thermogenesis can be activated in cold exposure to raise body temperature.

In this process, substances such as free fatty acids (derived from triacylglycerols) remove purine (ADP, GDP and others) inhibition of thermogenin (uncoupling protein-1), which causes an influx of H+ into the matrix of the mitochondria and bypasses the ATP synthase channel. This uncouples oxidative phosphorylation, and the energy from the proton motive force is dissipated as heat rather than producing ATP from ADP, which would store chemical energy for the body's use. Thermogenesis can also be produced by leakage of the sodium-potassium pump and the Ca2+ pump. Thermogenesis is contributed to by futile cycles, such as the simultaneous occurrence of lipogenesis and lipolysis or glycolysis and gluconeogenesis.

The low demands of thermogenesis mean that free fatty acids draw, for the most part, on lipolysis as the method of energy production.

Regulation[]

Non-shivering thermogenesis is regulated mainly by thyroid hormone and the sympathetic nervous system. Some hormones, such as norepinephrine and leptin, may stimulate thermogenesis by activating the sympathetic nervous system. Rising insulin levels after eating may be responsible for diet-induced thermogenesis (thermic effect of food).


See also[]

External links[]


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