Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of this study was to investigate the regulation of leptin expression and production in cultured human adipocytes using the model of in vitro differentiated human adipocytes. Freshly isolated human preadipocytes did not exhibit significant leptin mRNA and protein levels as assessed by reverse transcriptase (RT)-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and radioimmunoassay (RIA). However, during differentiation induced by a defined adipogenic serum-free medium, cellular leptin mRNA and leptin protein released into the medium increased considerably in accordance with the cellular lipid accumulation. In fully differentiated human fat cells, insulin provoked a dose-dependent rise in leptin protein. Cortisol at a near physiological concentration of 10(-8) mol/l was found to potentiate this insulin effect by almost threefold. Removal of insulin and cortisol, respectively, was followed by a rapid decrease in leptin expression, which was reversible after readdition of the hormones. These results clearly indicate that both insulin and cortisol are potent and possibly physiological regulators of leptin expression in human adipose tissue.
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PMID:Insulin and cortisol promote leptin production in cultured human fat cells. 882 83

Our knowledge of the role of the recently cloned ob-protein (leptin) in the regulation of body fat stores is largely derived from experiments performed in mice. Different mouse models exhibit abnormalities in ob-gene expression, with extreme overexpression in mice which lack bioactive ob-protein, have nonfunctional ob-receptors or hypothalamic lesions, and undetectable expression in mice with suggested defects in regulatory elements. The aim of this study is to examine if defects, corresponding to those in mice, exist in human obesity. Adipose tissue was obtained from 94 adult obese subjects and from six children who had developed obesity after surgery in the hypothalamic region. Total RNA was isolated and ob-gene expression was examined by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Northern blot. The coding region of the ob-gene was sequenced in both directions in the 94 obese adults. No mutations were detected in the coding region of the ob-gene and ob-gene expression was detectable in all subjects and none of the subjects had an extreme overexpression. There was no systematic increase in ob-expression in obese children with hypothalamic disease compared to their healthy brothers and sisters. These results show that severe abnormalities involving the ob-gene, analogous to those described in mouse models, are rare in human obesity. We therefore conclude that the cloning and subsequent analysis of the ob-gene has not provided information that can, by itself, explain the genetic component in the development of human obesity.
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PMID:Obese (ob) gene defects are rare in human obesity. 906 13

Human brown pre-adipocytes were immortalized by microinjection of the genes encoding simian virus 40 T and t antigens under the control of the human vimentin promotor. The transfected pre-adipocytes were cultured for several months with no loss of their morphological characteristics. These cells accumulate lipids and differentiate into adipocytes when treated with insulin, triiodothyronine and dexamethazone. The mRNA of various adipocyte markers was detected by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis, including hormone-sensitive lipase, lipoprotein lipase, adipsin, glucose transporters 1 and 4, the uncoupling protein (specific of brown adipocytes), and leptin, the product of the ob gene. Pharmacological analyses indicated that the beta3-adrenoceptor is the predominant beta-adrenoceptor subtype in PAZ6 cells and that this receptor subtype is functionally coupled to adenylate cyclase and lipolysis. The immortalization of human adipocytes will permit pharmacological analysis of the human beta3-adrenoceptor function in adipose cells and will allow detailed studies of human adipocyte differentiation.
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PMID:Human immortalized brown adipocytes express functional beta3-adrenoceptor coupled to lipolysis. 913 67

The expression of the ob gene product leptin in adipose tissues has been previously described to be regulated by insulin in vivo and vitro. Akt, a ser/thr kinase with a pleckstrin homology domain, has recently been identified to function in the insulin receptor signaling cascade. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of Akt in the production of leptin by adipocytes. Therefore, we examined leptin production by 3T3-L1 adipocytes stably expressing a myristoylated version of Akt which is constitutively active. Leptin levels in the supernatants of serum starved, nonstimulated 3T3-L1 adipocytes were determined by radioimmunoassay (RIA). Expression of the constitutively active Akt was found to induce a more than 20-fold increase in leptin levels whereas a control non-myristoylated Akt had no effect. Leptin mRNA levels as determined by either RNase protection assay or reverse transcriptase (RT)-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were not elevated by the constitutively active Akt. These results indicate that Akt can induce leptin production in 3T3-L1 adipocytes via a non-transcriptional mechanism.
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PMID:A constitutively active version of the Ser/Thr kinase Akt induces production of the ob gene product, leptin, in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. 923 12

The expression of leptin and its receptors was examined by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescence in granulosa and cumulus cells of pre-ovulatory follicles and in meiotically mature oocytes obtained from women undergoing in-vitro fertilization. Leptin concentrations were measured in newly aspirated follicular fluids and in maternal serum before and after the administration of an ovulatory dose of human chorionic gonadotrophin. The findings demonstrate leptin expression at the mRNA and protein levels by granulosa and cumulus cells, and the presence of leptin in mature human oocytes. While an association between follicular leptin concentration and embryo development was not observed, a post-ovulatory increase in serum leptin concentration was associated with implantation potential. The results are discussed with respect to possible roles of leptin in early human development.
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PMID:The expression of leptin and its receptors in pre-ovulatory human follicles. 923 34

Recent studies demonstrated significantly higher serum leptin concentrations in females as compared with males, even after correction for differences in body fat mass. The aim of our study was to measure serum leptin concentrations in a large group of obese children and adolescents to determine the possible role of sex steroid hormones on both leptin serum concentrations and production in human adipocytes. Obese girls were found to have significantly higher leptin concentrations than boys at the same degree of adiposity (25.2+/-14.1 vs. 17.2+/-12.6 ng/ml, P < 0.001). In a multiple regression analysis with age and body mass index (percent body fat) as fixed variables, it turned out that testosterone had a potent negative effect on serum leptin in boys, but not in girls. In vitro experiments using newly developed human adipocytes in primary culture showed that both testosterone and its biologically active metabolite dihydrotestosterone are able to reduce leptin secretion into the culture medium by up to 62%. Using a semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR method, testosterone was found to suppress leptin mRNA to a similar extent. These results suggest that, apart from differences in body fat mass, the higher androgen concentrations in obese boys are responsible for the lower leptin serum concentrations compared with obese girls.
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PMID:Contribution of androgens to the gender difference in leptin production in obese children and adolescents. 925 79

Leptin is the protein product of the recently cloned obesity gene. Leptin receptor mRNA is found in a number of central and peripheral locations. The hypothalamus is a presumed site of action. However, little is known about the specific locations of the receptor in peripheral organs. Epinephrine has potent anorectic effects and can cause weight loss by a variety of mechanisms. Excretion of epinephrine is reduced in the ob/ob mouse, which lacks leptin, suggesting an effect by leptin on the adrenal medulla. In the current study, the presence of the leptin receptor was identified on epinephrine-secreting cells in the adrenal medulla. Immunohistochemical studies found dense leptin receptor-like immunoreactivity in the adrenal medulla with no labeling in the adrenal cortex. Double immunofluorescent labeling confirmed that the leptin receptor was present on cells that were phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase-like immunoreactive and therefore were epinephrine-secreting cells. Leptin receptor mRNA in the adrenal medulla was detected by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, with the majority of the mRNA coding for the short isoform (Ob-Ra) of the receptor. Finally, autoradiography was performed using 125I-labeled leptin; specific binding was found in the adrenal medulla, with no specific binding in the adrenal cortex. These results suggest that leptin may have a direct effect on epinephrine-secreting cells in the adrenal medulla. Epinephrine may play a role in mediating the effects of leptin to reduce body weight.
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PMID:Leptin receptors in the adrenal medulla of the rat. 927

Primers specific to the long isoform of leptin receptor (OB-Rb) mRNA were used in reverse transcriptase-linked polymerase chain reactions (RT-PCR) to investigate the expression of this receptor in the hypothalamus and cerebellum of human and rat. For both regions, we observed RT-PCR cDNAs as well as restriction enzyme cleavage fragments of expected sizes. Additionally, in situ hybridization of human cerebellum using two independent [35S]oligonucleotide probes complementary to the OB-Rb mRNA sequence revealed a prominent hybridization signal within the granular layer. Overall, our findings demonstrate the expression of OB-Rb mRNA in the cerebellum and suggest that in such a location, leptin receptors may mediate a function presumably not linked to body weight homeostasis.
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PMID:Expression of leptin receptor mRNA (long form splice variant) in the human cerebellum. 933 26

The present study has examined the short- and long-term effects of growth hormone (GH) treatment on the leptin system and energy expenditure. Thirty male individuals with abdominal obesity were randomised to GH or placebo treatment in a 9-month, double-blind study. The dose of GH was 9.5 microg/kg, administered subcutaneously every evening. Serum leptin concentrations were measured by a human leptin RIA. Total RNA was isolated from adipose tissue biopsies and leptin mRNA levels were determined by a semi-quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR assay. Body composition was determined by potassium-40 and the basal metabolic rate (BMR) was measured by a computerised, ventilated, open-hood system. As compared with placebo, an overall decrease in serum leptin concentrations as assessed by the area under the curve (AUC) (P < 0.05) and an increase in BMR (AUC, P < 0.05) were observed during GH treatment. The overall GH-induced changes were due to marked changes in serum leptin concentrations and BMR after 6 weeks of treatment. After 9 months of GH treatment there was a significant reduction in body fat (BF) while serum leptin concentrations and BMR did not differ from baseline values. Leptin mRNA levels did not change over the study period. We speculate that long-term GH treatment induces a new energy balance steady state with decreased BF stores. The effects of GH on the leptin system is suggested to be of importance for the maintenance of a lower BF mass.
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PMID:Effects of growth hormone treatment on the leptin system and on energy expenditure in abdominally obese men. 957 8

Leptin and its structural gene, Ob, are exclusively expressed in adipose tissue. Leptin is secreted into the blood and is responsible for fat mass regulation via leptin receptors in the hypothalamus. This has been considered the major role of leptin, but leptin receptor isoforms are expressed not only in the brain but also in most other tissues in humans and rodents: heart, placenta, lung, liver, muscle, kidney, pancreas, spleen, thymus, prostate, testes, ovary, small intestine, and colon. This implicates leptin regulation in other systems apart from fat mass regulation, and leptin action has been demonstrated in human fetal development and reproductive development, liver metabolism, hematopoiesis, and insulin secretion. Four splice variants of the leptin receptor have been identified in humans: the long isoform huOb-R and the shorter isoforms B219.1 to B219.3. It is known that the long isoform has full intracellular signaling capacity, and is responsible for anorectic action in the hypothalamus. The roles of the other isoforms are yet to be elucidated. Here, we report the identification by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of three leptin receptor isoforms coexpressed in human visceral adipose tissue: the long isoform huOb-R and the short isoforms huB219.1 and huB219.3. The possible roles of these isoforms are discussed.
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PMID:Leptin receptor isoforms expressed in human adipose tissue. 966 33


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