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1.
Leptin is a peptide released by adipocytes that has profound effects on central regulation of body metabolism. The present study represents an investigation into leptin effects on hypothalamic control of reproductive function, specifically on GnRH release. Adult male rats (gonadectomized or sham-operated) were used as donors of hypothalamic tissue that was used as intact hemihypothalami or as enzymatically dispersed hemihypothalami in a perifusion culture system. Continuous samples were collected at 10-min intervals for 8 to 10 hr and were assayed to measure temporal changes in GnRH release in response to various doses of leptin infused into the perifusion chambers. Leptin at the highest dose (10(-8) M) resulted in consistent and significant stimulation of GnRH release. There were no effects of treatment for surgical preparation (gonadectomy versus sham) or tissue preparation (intact versus dispersed hemihypothalami). The results of this study support the hypothesis that leptin plays a direct stimulatory role in the regulation of GnRH release. This study describes an important step in our understanding of the mechanism that connects changes in basal metabolism with reproductive function. These results indicate an intact interneuronal network is unnecessary for these leptin effects, but does not exclude a role for interneuronal networks in this regulatory pathway.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Leptin regulation of reproductive function and fertility.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Leptin, a 16-KD protein secreted primarily by adipose tissue, was first discovered in the search for a satiety signal. When administered into the brain, leptin depresses appetite. Interestingly, hyperphagic, obese, transgenic mice with leptin deficiency were noted to be reproductively incompetent, and administration of leptin restored their fertility. These pivotal observations led to numerous studies on the site of action of leptin within the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-gonadal axis, and a variety of models have been used ranging from the prepubertal condition to fasting suppression of reproductive hormones. The preponderance of studies thus far has focused on how leptin serves as a metabolic signal of energy balance within the neuroendocrine system, particularly as a regulator of GnRH/LH secretion. Less research has been conducted with other components of the reproductive system, but local effects of leptin have been demonstrated in the gonads where hyperleptinemia suppresses steroidogenesis and potentially affects gamete maturation. This presentation will review the major concepts for the role of leptin in the modulation of fertility and will consider the potential use of leptin in assisted reproductive technology and embryo transfer.  相似文献   

4.
The hormone leptin is secreted from white adipocytes, and serum levels of leptin correlate with adipose tissue mass. Leptin was first described as acting on the satiety centre in the hypothalamus through specific receptors (ob-R) to restrict food intake and enhance energy expenditure. Leptin plays a crucial role in the maintenance of body weight and glucose homeostasis hrough central and peripheral pathways, including regulation of insulin secretion by pancreatic b cells. Leptin may also directly affect the metabolism and function of peripheral tissues. Leptin has been implicated in causing peripheral insulin resistance by attenuating insulin action, and perhaps insulin signalling, in various insulin-responsive cell types. Research has demonstrated a significant relationship between leptin and insulin, but the mechanisms underlying the changes of leptin induced by insulin, and vice versa, remain to be studied in more detail. Recent data provides convincing evidence that leptin has beneficial effects on glucose homeostasis in mouse models of insulin-deficient type 1 diabetes mellitus. Our study suggests that leptin could be used as an adjunct of insulin therapy in insulin-deficient diabetes, thereby providing an insight into the therapeutic properties of leptin as an anti-diabetic agent. Safety evaluation should include a careful assessment of the effects of this combination therapy on the counterregulatory response to hypoglycaemia. The role of leptin in alpha-cell function has not been studied in detail. Extensive studies will be needed to determine the long-term safety and efficacy of this therapy.  相似文献   

5.
Negative energy balance inhibits reproduction by restraining GnRH secretion. Leptin is a permissive metabolic signal for reproduction, but GnRH neurons do not appear to express leptin receptors, suggesting that interneurons transmit leptin signals to these cells. Serotonin (5HT) has satiety effects similar to those of leptin and alters LH release, and serotonergic neurons, which have been shown to express leptin receptors, terminate on GnRH neurons. We hypothesized that serotonergic neurons convey leptin signals to the reproductive neuroendocrine axis. To test this, mice were fasted for 48 h beginning on Diestrous Day 1. While fasting, mice received saline or leptin every 12 h or the 5HT-selective reuptake-inhibitor fluoxetine once at the start of the fast. Estrous cycles of fasted mice were longer (mean +/- SEM, 10.2 +/- 0.5 days; P < 0.0001) than those of fed mice (4.5 +/- 0.2 days). As previously reported, leptin prevented fasting-induced cycle lengthening (4.6 +/- 0.7 days). Fluoxetine also rescued estrous cycles in fasted mice (4.7 +/- 0.6 days), suggesting that 5HT and leptin have similar positive effects on reproduction. Coadministration of the 5HT 1/2/7 receptor-antagonist metergoline blocked rescue of cycle length by fluoxetine and by leptin. Treating leptin-deficient ob/ob and leptin receptor-deficient db/db mice with fluoxetine did not normalize body weight or rescue fertility, perhaps due to altered serotonergic tone in these animals. Together, these data demonstrate a permissive role for serotonergic systems in the metabolic control of reproduction and are consistent with the hypothesis that serotonergic neurons convey leptin signals to GnRH neurons.  相似文献   

6.
Leptin and reproduction.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
  相似文献   

7.
Leptin and metabolic control of reproduction   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Leptin treatment prevents the effects of fasting on reproductive processes in a variety of species. The mechanisms that underlie these effects have not been elucidated. Progress in this area of research might be facilitated by viewing reproductive processes in relation to mechanisms that maintain fuel homeostasis. Reproduction, food intake, and fuel partitioning can be viewed as homeostatic responses controlled by a sensory system that monitors metabolic signals. These signals are generated by changes in intracellular metabolic fuel availability and oxidation rather than by changes in the amount of body fat or by changes in any aspect of body composition. Leptin might be viewed as either a mediator or as a modulator of the intracellular metabolic signal. Consistent with its purported action as a mediator of the metabolic signal, leptin synthesis and secretion are influenced acutely by changes in metabolic fuel availability, and these changes might lead to changes in reproductive function. The effects of leptin treatment on reproduction are blocked by treatments that inhibit intracellular fuel oxidation. Metabolic signals that inhibit reproduction in leptin-treated animals might act via neural pathways that are independent of leptin's action. Alternatively, both leptin and metabolic inhibitors might interact at the level of intracellular fuel oxidation. In keeping with the possibility that leptin modulates the metabolic signal, leptin treatment increases fuel availability, uptake, and oxidation in particular tissues. Leptin might affect reproduction indirectly by altering fuel oxidation or other peripheral processes such as gastric emptying. Reproductive processes are among the most energetically expensive in the female repertoire. Because leptin increases energy expenditure while simultaneously inhibiting energy intake, it may have limited use as a long-term treatment for infertility.  相似文献   

8.
Role of leptin in the stomach and the pancreas   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Leptin, a 16 kDa protein encoded by the ob gene, is known mainly for its role in the regulation of food intake, body composition and energy expenditure through a central feedback mechanism. Initially leptin was considered as an ob gene product of adipocytes but recently the presence of leptin and its receptors have been revealed in other organs including gastric mucosa and the pancreas and found to be released from these organs by cholecystokinin (CCK), gastrin and ordinary feeding. Furthermore, leptin was found to mimic the action of CCK on gastric and pancreatic integrity, while reducing the food intake and to affect gastric and pancreatic secretion. This report emphasizes the role of leptin originating from the gastrointestinal tract acting synergistically with CCK at the hypothalamus level on the mechanism of food intake and locally on the protection of gastric mucosa and the pancreas against noxious agents and to maintain tissue integrity.  相似文献   

9.
M Paolucci  M Rocco  E Varricchio 《Life sciences》2001,69(20):2399-2408
Leptin is a 16 kDa peptide produced by adipocytes in response to increasing fat stores and signals to the brain to stop eating and increase energy expenditure. Recent studies point out that the role of leptin is much broader and includes the regulation of reproduction. The lizard, Podarcis sicula, is an oviparous species characterized, at this latitude, by a seasonal reproductive cycle. Since in Podarcis sicula the recovery of the gonadal function coincides with the recovery of metabolic activity, we have hypothesized that leptin might be involved in the regulation of the reproductive function in this species. We have identified an immunoreactive band in the plasma of the female of Podarcis sicula, which comigrated with recombinant mouse leptin and cross reacted with polyclonal antibodies against mouse leptin. A RIA method developed by Linco (St. Louis, MO) was utilized to measure leptin concentration in plasma, liver and fat bodies of Podarcis sicula throughout the reproductive cycle. The antibody used in this kit (Linco's Multi-Species Leptin Radioimmunoassay kit) was produced in the guinea pig against human leptin but displays crossreactivity to leptin molecules of many species. The level of leptin in the plasma of Podarcis sicula was in the same range as that of mammals. Leptin levels in plasma, liver and fat bodies fluctuated during the reproductive cycle, in a way consistent with its possible role in reproduction.  相似文献   

10.
Studies assessed, either directly or indirectly, the role of GnRH in leptin-mediated stimulation of LH release in cattle before and after sexual maturation. In experiment 1, the objectives were to determine whether leptin could acutely accelerate the frequency of LH pulses, and putatively GnRH pulses, in prepubertal heifers at different stages of development. In experiment 2, we determined directly whether acute, leptin-mediated increases in LH secretion in the fasted, mature female are accompanied by an increase in GnRH secretion. Ten-month-old prepubertal heifers (experiment 1) fed normal- (n = 5) and restricted-growth (n = 5) diets received three injections of saline or recombinant ovine leptin (oleptin; 0.2 microg/kg body weight, i.v.) at hourly intervals during 5-h experiments conducted every 5 wk until all normal-growth heifers were pubertal. Leptin increased mean concentrations of circulating LH regardless of diet, but pulse characteristics were not altered at any age. In experiment 2, ovariectomized, estradiol-implanted cows (n = 5) were fasted twice for 72 h and treated with either saline or oleptin i.v. (as in experiment 1) on Day 3 of each fast. Leptin increased plasma concentrations of LH and third ventricle cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of GnRH, and increased the amplitude of LH and the size of GnRH pulses, respectively, on Day 3 of fasting compared to saline. Overall, results indicate that leptin is unable to accelerate the pulse generator in heifers at any developmental stage. However, leptin-mediated augmentation of LH concentrations and pulse amplitude in the nutritionally stressed, mature female are associated with modifications in GnRH secretory dynamics.  相似文献   

11.
A new dimension to the regulation of energy balance has come from the identification of the ob (obese) gene and its protein product, leptin. Leptin is produced primarily in white adipose tissue, but synthesis also occurs in brown fat and the placenta. Several physiological functions have been described for leptin‐the inhibition of food intake, the stimulation/maintenance of energy expenditure, as a signal of energy reserves to the reproductive system, and as a factor in haematopoiesis. The production of leptin by white fat is influenced by a number of factors, including insulin and glucocorticoids (which are stimulatory), and fasting, cold exposure and ß‐adrenoceptor agonists (which are inhibitory). A key role in the regulation of leptin production is envisaged for the sympathetic nervous system, operating through ß3‐adreno‐ceptors. The leptin receptor gene is expressed in a wide range of tissues, and several splice variants are evident. A long form variant (Ob‐Rb) with an intracellular signalling domain is found particularly in the hypothalamus. Leptin exerts its central effects through neuropeptide Y, and through the glucagon‐like peptide‐1 and melanocortin systems, but it may also interact with other neuroendocrine pathways. The role and function of the leptin system in agricultural animals has not been established, but it offers a potential new target for the manipulation of body fat.  相似文献   

12.
Leptin, the product of the ob gene, has been proposed as a metabolic signal that regulates the secretion of GnRH/LH. This may be critical during prepubertal development to synchronize information about energy stores and the secretion of GnRH/LH. This study aimed to assess the effect of food restriction on the episodic secretion of leptin and LH in young female sheep. Five 20-week-old prepubertal females were fed a low-level diet for 10 weeks to maintain the body weight. Control females of the same age received food ad libitum. Blood samples were collected at 10-min intervals for six hours at 20, 26, and 30 weeks of age, and plasma leptin, LH, insulin and cortisol concentrations were measured. In the control group, no changes were found in pulsatile LH secretion characteristics. Mean LH concentrations and LH amplitude were lower in the food-restricted group than in the control group at 26 and 30 weeks of age. In the control group, pulsatile leptin secretion did not change. When compared to control lambs of the same age, the food-restricted group showed lower mean plasma leptin concentrations, pulse amplitude and plasma insulin levels, after 6 weeks of restriction (week 26), although by week 30, plasma leptin concentrations and plasma insulin rose to those of the control group. Leptin pulse frequency did not change, nor did mean plasma levels of insulin in the control group at any age studied. Mean plasma concentration of cortisol did not change within or between groups. These data suggest that plasma leptin concentrations may not be associated with the onset of puberty under regular feeding and natural photoperiod in lambs. Prolonged food restriction, however, induces metabolic adaptations that allow an increase of leptin during the final period, probably related to the development of some degree of insulin resistance.  相似文献   

13.
Renalase was initially identified in human kidney as a soluble monoamine oxidase. Here we show that renalase is predominantly expressed in reproductive/steroidogenic systems, with particularly substantial expression in oocytes, granulosa, interstitial and luteal cells of ovary, spermatogenic cells of testis, and cortex of adrenal gland, suggesting its function(s) in maturation of germ cells and steroid hormone regulation. Renalase expression increases in testes and ovaries as mice develop and its expression is further enhanced in the ovaries of pregnant mice, indicating an activity of renalase in reproduction. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, cetrorelix, repressed renalase expression in mice ovaries and testes, suggesting that steroids regulate renalase expression. Leptin is an effector and modulator of steroid hormones and reproduction. Surprisingly, knockout of leptin causes a dramatic increase of renalase expression in mice testes. Taken together, our results suggest that reproductive/steroidogenic systems are also the sources for renalase secretion and renalase may play a critical role in reproduction and hormone regulation. This provides a novel insight into understanding the function of renalase.  相似文献   

14.
Recent data indicate that leptin is involved in the control of reproductive function. Experiments were carried out to analyse the role of endogenous leptin in the regulation of LH and prolactin secretion during the afternoon of pro-oestrus and that induced by ovarian steroids in ovariectomized rats. In the first experiment, cyclic female rats were implanted with intra-auricular and intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) cannulae and, at pro-oestrus, were injected (i.c.v.) with 10 microliters normal rabbit serum or leptin antiserum (at 13:00 and 14:00 h). Blood samples were obtained at 10:00 h and at intervals of 1 h between 13:00 and 20:00 h. In the second experiment, female rats in pro-oestrus were injected with normal rabbit serum or leptin antiserum at 16:00 and 18:00 h and blood samples were taken every 10 min between 18:00 and 20:00 h. In the third experiment, adult female rats that had been ovariectomized 2 weeks before were implanted with intra-auricular and i.c.v. cannulae and treated with oestradiol benzoate (30 micrograms s.c.) at 10:00 h and progesterone (2 mg s.c.) 48 h later. Normal rabbit serum (10 microliters) or leptin antiserum (10 microliters) were injected (i.c.v.) at 13:00 and 14:00 h, and blood samples were obtained at 10:00 h and at intervals of 1 h between 13:00 and 20:00 h. In the fourth experiment, hemipituitaries from ovariectomized steroid-treated female rats were incubated in the presence of leptin116-130 (an active fragment of the native molecule), GnRH or leptin + GnRH. Prolactin and LH secretion during the afternoon of pro-oestrus in females treated with leptin antiserum was similar to that observed in animals injected with normal rabbit serum. In ovariectomized female rats, the steroid-induced LH surge increased slightly after administration of leptin antiserum, whereas the prolactin surge remained unchanged. In vitro, leptin116-130 (10(-5) to 10(-8) mol l-1) inhibited LH secretion and modulated the effect of GnRH on LH release, depending on the concentration of GnRH: leptin116-130 (10(-6) mol l-1) reduced the effectiveness of 10(-7) mol GnRH l-1 and increased that of 10(-9) mol GnRH l-1. In conclusion, these experiments indicate that acute immunoneutralization of endogenous leptin does not interfere with spontaneous or steroid-induced LH and prolactin surges. In addition, the finding that leptin116-130 inhibited LH release and modulated the effectiveness of GnRH in vitro provides evidence of the direct modulatory role of leptin on LH secretion acting at the pituitary.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of leptin on mouse trophoblast cell invasion   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The hormone leptin is produced by adipose tissue and can function as a signal of nutritional status to the reproductive system. The expression of leptin receptor and, in some species, leptin, in the placenta suggests a role for leptin in placental development, but this role has not been elucidated. Leptin is required at the time of embryo implantation in the leptin-deficient ob/ ob mouse and has been shown to upregulate expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), enzymes involved in trophoblast invasion, in cultured human trophoblast cells. This led us to the hypothesis that leptin promotes the invasiveness of trophoblast cells crucial to placental development. We found that leptin stimulated mouse trophoblast cell invasion through a matrigel-coated insert on Day 10, but not Day 18 of pregnancy. Optimal stimulation occurred at a concentration of 50 ng/ml leptin, similar to the peak plasma leptin concentration during pregnancy in the mouse. Leptin treatment did not stimulate proliferation of mouse trophoblast cells in primary culture. Leptin stimulation of invasion was prevented by 25 muM GM6001, an inhibitor of MMP activity. Our results suggest that leptin may play a role in the establishment of the placenta during early pregnancy and that this function is dependent on MMP activity. This effect of leptin may represent one mechanism by which body condition affects placental development.  相似文献   

16.
Leptin, an adipocyte-derived hormone, acts directly on the brain to control food intake and energy expenditure. An important question is the identity of first-order neurons initiating leptin's anti-obesity effects. A widely held view is that most, if not all, of leptin's effects are mediated by neurons located in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus. However, leptin receptors (LEPRs) are expressed in other sites as well, including the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH). The possible role of leptin acting in "nonarcuate" sites has largely been ignored. In the present study, we show that leptin depolarizes and increases the firing rate of steroidogenic factor-1 (SF1)-positive neurons in the VMH. We also show, by generating mice that lack LEPRs on SF1-positive neurons, that leptin action at this site plays an important role in reducing body weight and, of note, in resisting diet-induced obesity. These results reveal a critical role for leptin action on VMH neurons.  相似文献   

17.
Leptin is an adipocyte-derived hormone/cytokine that links nutritional status with neuroendocrine and immune functions. In humans, leptin influences energy homeostasis and regulates neuroendocrine function primarily in states of energy deficiency. Initially described as an antiobesity hormone, leptin has subsequently been shown also to influence basal metabolism, hematopoiesis, thermogenesis, reproduction, and angiogenesis. As a cytokine, leptin can affect thymic homeostasis and the secretion of acute-phase reactants such as interleukin-1 (IL-1) and tumor-necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). Leptin links nutritional status and proinflammatory T helper 1 (Th1) immune responses and the decrease in leptin plasma concentration during food deprivation leads to impaired immune function. Similar to other pro-inflammatory cytokines, leptin promotes Th1-cell differentiation and can modulate the onset and progression of autoimmune responses in several animal models of disease. Here, we review the advances and controversy for a role of leptin in the pathophysiology of immune responses and discuss novel possible therapeutic implications for leptin modulators.  相似文献   

18.
The secretion of gonadotrophins from anterior pituitary cells can be modulated by leptin and signals originating from the immune system, among others, by nitric oxide (NO). There are some studies that have demonstrated a role for leptin and NO in the regulation of FSH in rodents, however, no similar data are available in regards to ewes. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to analyse the leptin effect on GnRH-induced FSH secretion from the ovine anterior pituitary cells in vitro. Additionally, the influence of leptin on NO release and its role in the GnRH and leptin-modulated secretion of FSH from pituitary gland of ewes was investigated. The obtained results show that the influence of leptin on FSH secretion is biphasic. Leptin in concentration 10(-8) and 10(-7) M/l significantly enhances, whereas 10(-6) and 10(-5) M/l of leptin suppresses FSH secretion from the pituitary cells in comparison to the control. The secretion of FSH and NO release under the influence of leptin are in very high positive correlation (r=0.77). The inhibition of NO synthesis with L-NAME., instead, disables leptin from the stimulation of FSH secretion.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Leptin plays a pivotal role in the regulation of energy homeostasis and metabolism, primarily by acting on neurons in the hypothalamus that control food intake. However, leptin receptors are more widely expressed in the brain suggesting additional, as yet unknown, functions of leptin. Here we show that both embryonic and adult hippocampal neurons express leptin receptors coupled to activation of STAT3 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt signaling pathways. Leptin protects hippocampal neurons against cell death induced by neurotrophic factor withdrawal and excitotoxic and oxidative insults. The neuroprotective effect of leptin is antagonized by the JAK2-STAT3 inhibitor AG-490, STAT3 decoy DNA, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt inhibitors but not by an inhibitor of MAPK. Leptin induces the production of manganese superoxide dismutase and the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-xL, and stabilizes mitochondrial membrane potential and lessens mitochondrial oxidative stress. Leptin receptor-deficient mice (db/db mice) are more vulnerable to seizure-induced hippocampal damage, and intraventricular administration of leptin protects neurons against seizures. By enhancing mitochondrial resistance to apoptosis and excitotoxicity, our findings suggest that leptin signaling serves a neurotrophic function in the developing and adult hippocampus.  相似文献   

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