Ucp1 promoter-driven Cre transgenic mice are useful in the manipulation of gene expression specifically in thermogenic adipose tissues. However, the wildly used Ucp1-Cre line was generated by random insertion into the genome and showed ectopic activity in some tissues beyond adipose tissues. Here, we characterized a knockin mouse line Ucp1-iCre generated by targeting IRES-Cre cassette immediately downstream the stop codon of the Ucp1 gene. The Cre insertion had little to no effect on uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) levels in brown adipose tissue. Ucp1-iCre mice of both genders exhibited normal thermogenesis and cold tolerance. When crossed with Rosa-tdTomato reporter mice, Ucp1-iCre mice showed robust Cre activity in thermogenic adipose tissues. In addition, limited Cre activity was sparsely present in the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), choroid plexus, kidney, adrenal glands, ovary, and testis in Ucp1-iCre mice, albeit to a much lesser extent and with reduced intensity compared with the conventional Ucp1-Cre line. Single-cell transcriptome analysis revealed Ucp1 mRNA expression in male spermatocytes. Moreover, male Ucp1-iCre mice displayed a high frequency of Cre-mediated recombination in the germline, whereas no such effect was observed in female Ucp1-iCre mice. These findings suggest that Ucp1-iCre mice offer promising utility in the context of conditional gene manipulation in thermogenic adipose tissues, while also highlighting the need for caution in mouse mating and genotyping procedures.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Ucp1 promoter-driven Cre transgenic mice are useful in the manipulation of gene expression specifically in thermogenic adipose tissues. The widely used Ucp1-Cre mouse line (Ucp1-CreEvdr), which was generated using the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) strategy, exhibits major brown and white fat transcriptomic dysregulation and ectopic activity beyond adipose tissues. Here, we comprehensively validate Ucp1-iCre knockin mice, which serve as another optional model besides Ucp1-CreEvdr mice for specific genetic manipulation in thermogenic tissue.
Keywords: Cre/loxp; Ucp1-Cre; brown adipose tissue; germlines.