- Article
Myeloid GHSR Deficiency Protects Against Thermogenic Impairment in Aging Through Immune Remodeling of Brown Adipose Tissue
- Hye Won Han,
- Da Mi Kim and
- Yuxiang Sun
- + 8 authors
Thermoregulatory dysfunction is a major pathophysiological consequence of aging, affecting many elderly individuals. Growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR) regulates energy homeostasis and immune function. We previously showed that global GHSR deletion improves thermogenic adaptation of brown adipose tissue (BAT) in aging, but the responsible cell type remained unclear. GHSR is expressed in macrophages, and its expression in macrophages increases with aging. Here, we studied myeloid-specific Ghsr-deleted male mice (LysM-Cre; Ghsrf/f denoted as “KO”) to assess their metabolic and immune responses to cold stress at young and old ages. Old mice showed impaired thermogenesis, marked by reduced core body temperature under 4 °C cold exposure, a blunted cold-induced increase in glucose levels, reduced BAT mass, and increased infiltration of pro-inflammatory CD38+ macrophages in BAT. In contrast, KO mice exhibited enhanced cold tolerance in both young and old mice. Notably, aged KO mice showed preserved BAT mass and a pronounced shift in resident macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory state. Consistently, aged KO mice showed reduced pro-inflammatory markers (Ccl2, Nos2) and increased expression of the thermogenic gene Ppargc1a and UCP1 protein under cold exposure. Together, these findings demonstrate that macrophage GHSR drives age-associated pro-inflammatory remodeling of BAT, and that its deletion promotes an immune environment favorable for thermogenic activation. Thus, targeting macrophage GHSR may offer a new therapeutic strategy to restore thermogenesis and enhance thermal resilience in aging.
9 February 2026







![RKIP and HER2 cross-talk signaling. The MAPK, NF-κB, and Akt pathways regulated by HER2 expression are shown (⇢). RKIP blocks critical signaling pathways, such as the MAPK, NF-κB, and PI3K/Akt pathways () [144,145,146,147]. However, by inhibiting these signaling cascades, RKIP reduces HER2-related signaling [12,133,134,135,136]. This figure demonstrates the antagonistic relationship between RKIP and HER2 and the regulatory feedback loop they form. Additionally, it illustrates three common mechanisms by which RKIP and HER2 interact, influencing cancer treatment and HER2-mediated cell proliferation. Created with BioRender.com. Accessed on 1 November 2025.](https://mdpi-res.com/cdn-cgi/image/w=281,h=192/https://mdpi-res.com/cells/cells-15-00319/article_deploy/html/images/cells-15-00319-g001-550.jpg)


