Leptin is a metabolic gate for the onset of puberty in the female rat
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Date
Authors
Weigle, David S.
Kuijper, Joseph L.
Steiner, Robert A.
Clifton, Donald K.
Cheung, Clement C.
Thornton, Janice E.
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Endocrine Society
Abstract
The timing of puberty onset in mammals is tightly coupled to the animal's
nutritional and metabolic state. We conducted two experiments to test the
hypothesis that leptin acts as a metabolic signal for the onset of
puberty. In the first experiment, we administered leptin (6.3 micrograms/g
twice daily) to a group of normal prepubertal female rats and compared
their rate of sexual maturation to that of two control groups. The group
of leptin-treated animals and one group of control animals were allowed to
eat ad lib, while the other group of control animals was pair-fed to the
leptin-treated group. Food intake in the leptin-treated group was reduced
to approximately 80% of the ad lib-fed control group, resulting in
retarded growth in both leptin-treated and pair-fed animals. All measured
indices of pubertal maturation-age at vaginal opening, age at first
estrus, ovarian weight, ovulatory index (corpora lutea/ovarian section),
uterine weight, and uterine cross-sectional area-were significantly
delayed in the pair-fed group but not different between the leptin-treated
group and ad lib-fed controls. The second experiment was similar to the
first, except that both the leptin-treated group and the pair-fed group
were fed at 70% of the ad lib-fed controls. Under these conditions, leptin
only partially reversed the delay in sexual maturation, as reflected by
the age at vaginal opening and first estrus. These results suggest that
leptin is not the primary signal that initiates the onset of puberty but
that instead, it acts in a permissive fashion, as a metabolic gate, to
allow pubertal maturation to proceed-if and when metabolic resources are
deemed adequate; moreover, these observations suggest that other metabolic
factors, besides leptin, influence the timing of puberty onset under
conditions of more severe dietary stress.
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Citation
Endocrinology. 1997 Feb;138(2):855-8
