4.3 Article

Percent relative cumulative frequency analysis in indirect calorimetry: application to studies of transgenic mice

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 82, Issue 12, Pages 1075-1083

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/Y04-117

Keywords

thermogenesis; oxygen consumption; metabolic rate; uncoupling protein; UCP

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Indirect calorimetry is commonly used in research and clinical settings to assess characteristics of energy expenditure. Respiration chambers in indirect calorimetry allow measurements over long periods of time (e.g., hours to days) and thus the collection of large sets of data. Current methods of data analysis usually involve the extraction of only a selected small proportion of data, most commonly the data that reflects resting metabolic rate. Here, we describe a simple quantitative approach for the analysis of large data sets that is capable of detecting small differences in energy metabolism. We refer to it as the percent relative cumulative frequency (PRCF) approach and have applied it to the study of uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1) deficient and control mice. The approach involves sorting data in ascending order, calculating their cumulative frequency, and expressing the frequencies in the form of percentile curves. Results demonstrate the sensitivity of the PRCF approach for analyses of oxygen consumption (V-O2) as well as respiratory exchange ratio data. Statistical comparisons of PRCF curves are based on the 50th percentile values and curve slopes (H values). The application of the PRCF approach revealed that energy expenditure in UCP1-deficient mice housed and studied at room temperature (24degreesC) is on average 10% lower (p<0.0001) than in littermate controls. The gradual acclimation of mice to 12degreesC caused a near-doubling of V-O2 in both UCPI-deficient and control mice. At this lower environmental temperature, there were no differences in V-O2 between groups. The latter is likely due to augmented shivering thermogenesis in UCPI-deficient mice compared with controls. With the increased availability of murine models of metabolic disease, indirect calorimetry is increasingly used, and the PRCF approach provides a novel and powerful means for data analysis.

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