Reduced Anorexigenic Efficacy of Leptin, But Not of the Melanocortin Receptor Agonist Melanotan-II, Predicts Diet- Induced Obesity in Rats
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Date
Authors
van Dijk, Gertjan
de Vries, Koert
Nyakas, Csaba
Buwalde, Bauke
Adage, Tiziana
Kuipers, Folkert
Kas, Martien J.H.
Adan, Roger A.H.
Wilkinson, Charles W.
Thiele, Todd E.
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Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Endocrinology
Abstract
Leptin gains access to the central nervous system where it influences activity of neuronal networks
involved in ingestive behavior, neuroendocrine activity, and metabolism. In particular, the brain
melanocortin (MC) system is important in leptin signaling and maintenance of energy balance.
Although leptin or MC receptor insensitivity has been proposed to be associated with obesity, the
present study compared central leptin and MC receptor stimulation on some of the above-mentioned
parameters and investigated whether these treatments predict proneness to diet-induced obesity
(DIO) in out-bred Wistar rats. Third-cerebroventricular administration of equi-anorexigenic doses
of leptin and of the MC agonist melanotan-II caused comparable increases in plasma ACTH and
corticosterone levels and c-Fos-labeling in approximately 70% of paraventricular hypothalamic
(PVN) neuronal cell bodies containing CRH. This reinforces involvement of paraventricular CRH
neurons in the short-term neuroendocrine and ingestive effects of leptin and melanocortins. In the
DIO prediction study, anorexigenic efficacy of melanotan-II was not correlated with any parameter
linked to DIO but was highly correlated with MC in situ binding (with labeled [Nle4,D-Phe7]α-MSH)
as well as CRH immunoreactivity in the PVN of DIO rats. This suggests intricate relationships among
MC signaling, the CRH system, and ingestive behavior unrelated to DIO. In the same animals, leptin’s
anorexigenic efficacy was not correlated with PVN MC in situ binding or CRH immunoreactivity
but correlated inversely to post-DIO plasma leptin, liver weight, and abdominal adiposity, the latter
being correlated to insulin resistance. Thus, differences in leptin but not MC signaling might underlie
DIO, visceral obesity, and insulin resistance.
