Cysteine depletion triggers adipose tissue thermogenesis and weight-loss

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Abstract

Dietary interventions such as caloric restriction (CR) 1 and methionine restriction 2 that prolong lifespan induce the ‘browning’ of white adipose tissue (WAT), an adaptive metabolic response that increases heat production to maintain health 3,4 . However, how diet influences adipose browning and metabolic health is unclear. Here, we identified that weight-loss induced by CR in humans 5 reduces cysteine concentration in WAT suggesting depletion of this amino-acid may be involved in metabolic benefits of CR. To investigate the role of cysteine on organismal metabolism, we created a cysteine-deficiency mouse model in which dietary cysteine was eliminated and cystathionine γ-lyase (CTH) 6 , the enzyme that synthesizes cysteine was conditionally deleted. Using this animal model, we found that systemic cysteine-depletion causes drastic weight-loss with increased fat utilization and browning of adipose tissue. The restoration of dietary cysteine in cysteine-deficient mice rescued weight loss together with reversal of adipose browning and increased food-intake in an on-demand fashion. Mechanistically, cysteine deficiency induced browning and weight loss is dependent on sympathetic nervous system derived noradrenaline signaling via β3-adrenergic-receptors and does not require UCP1. Therapeutically, in high-fat diet fed obese mice, one week of cysteine-deficiency caused 30% weight-loss and reversed inflammation. These findings thus establish that cysteine is essential for organismal metabolism as removal of cysteine in the host triggers adipose browning and rapid weight loss.

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