Circulating leptin response to feeding and exogenous infusion of insulin in sheep exposed to thermoneutral and cold environments |
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Authors: | Asakuma S Morishita H Sugino T Kurose Y Kobayashi S Terashima Y |
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Institution: | Laboratory of Animal Nutrition, Faculty of Animal Science, Kitasato University, Towada-shi, 034-8628, Aomori, Japan |
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Abstract: | Leptin has been shown to regulate feed intake and energy expenditure. Insulin stimulates leptin secretion in rodents, but its action on leptin secretion is still obscure in ruminants. If insulin stimulates leptin secretion in ruminants, circulating leptin concentrations may change during exposure to cold, because of fluctuating insulin secretion and action in the cold environment. The present experiment was designed to determine whether feeding or exogenous administration of insulin affects circulating leptin levels in sheep exposed to thermoneutral and cold environments. Suffolk rams that were shorn and fed a diet once daily were subjected to a thermoneutral (20 degrees C) or cold (0 degrees C) environment for at least 1 week. Overall mean concentrations of plasma leptin in the feeding experiment were lower (P<0.05) in the cold environment than in the thermoneutral environment. Plasma leptin levels remained relatively unchanged after feeding in both environments, though plasma insulin response to feeding in both environments increased (P<0.01). The euglycemic clamps (insulin infusion rate: 4 mUkgBW(-1)min(-1) for 2 h) increased (P<0.01) circulating leptin concentrations in the thermoneutral, but not in the cold environment. These results suggest that lower circulating leptin levels in ruminants exposed to the cold environment could be partly due to the depressed insulin action on leptin secretion. |
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