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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total deficiency in or resistance to the protein leptin causes severe obesity. As leptin levels rise with increasing adiposity in rodents and man, it is proposed to act as a negative feedback 'adipostatic signal' to brain centres controlling energy homeostasis, limiting obesity in times of nutritional abundance.
Starvation
is also a threat to homeostasis that triggers adaptive responses, but whether leptin plays a role in the physiology of
starvation
is unknown.
Leptin
concentration falls during
starvation
and totally leptin-deficient ob/ob mice have neuroendocrine abnormalities similar to those of
starvation
, suggesting that this may be the case. Here we show that preventing the
starvation
-induced fall in leptin with exogenous leptin substantially blunts the changes in gonadal, adrenal and thyroid axes in male mice, and prevents the
starvation
-induced delay in ovulation in female mice. In contrast, leptin repletion during this period of
starvation
has little or no effect on body weight, blood glucose or ketones. We propose that regulation of the neuroendocrine system during
starvation
could be the main physiological role of leptin.
...
PMID:Role of leptin in the neuroendocrine response to fasting. 871 38
Leptin
, the product of the ob gene, controls appetite through the hypothalamus and may affect many other tissues because of the widespread distribution of its receptors.
Leptin
is synthesized by white adipose tissue (WAT) under conditions of high energy availability and insulin stimulus. Glucocorticoids enhance this synthesis and catecholamines hamper leptin production.
Leptin
diminishes insulin secretion by the pancreatic beta cells and induces insulin resistance. In fact leptin hampers insulin action on WAT itself in a negative feedback loop. The evidence acquired in studies on diabetics,
starvation
, refeeding and insulin and glucose clamps supports this interpretation, which may also explain part of the difficulties encountered by the current postulate that links leptin to WAT mass size signalling to the brain.
Leptin
may be, essentially, a counter-regulatory hormone limiting the insulin drive to store energy in the form of fat, its effects reaching from a decrease in food intake to lower insulin secretion and increased resistance to insulin and lower glucose uptake and fat synthesis by WAT.
...
PMID:Is leptin an insulin counter-regulatory hormone? 901 47
Prematurity, maternal smoking, and low birth weight each result in neuroendocrine dysfunction and increased perinatal morbidity and mortality.
Leptin
, an adipocyte-secreted protein, has provided the first physiological link to the regulatory system controlling
starvation
-induced neuroendocrine changes in rodents. This study investigated whether leptin concentrations were detectable in cord blood of newborns, and assessed the effect of birth weight, prematurity, and maternal smoking on cord blood leptin concentrations. Fifty consecutively enrolled full-term and 12 preterm newborns born to mothers who smoked during pregnancy were compared to 50 full-term and 12 preterm newborns born to parents who were nonsmokers. RIA for leptin was performed using cord blood samples collected immediately after birth.
Leptin
concentrations were detectable in newborns and correlated positively with obesity (full-term, r = 0.30, P < 0.01; preterm, r = 0.47, P < 0.05). Maternal smoking during pregnancy was associated with decreased leptin concentrations in the cord blood of both full-term and preterm newborns. This effect was independent of obesity (full-term newborns: 5.25 +/- 2.48 vs. 4.21 +/- 2.71 ng/ml, P = 0.01) and was more pronounced in premature newborns (5.67 +/- 3.6 vs. 2.46 +/- 2.03, P = 0.02), and its magnitude in full-term newborns was directly related to the reported number of cigarettes the mothers of the full-term newborns smoked per day (r = -0.438, P < 0.001). Thus, low birth weight and maternal smoking are both associated with decreased leptin concentrations, and these effects are more pronounced in premature newborns. Future studies will be needed to determine whether administration of leptin might reverse the neuroendocrine dysfunction caused by maternal smoking.
...
PMID:Effect of birth weight and maternal smoking on cord blood leptin concentrations of full-term and preterm newborns. 928 10
Leptin
is thought to regulate energy balance through effects on food intake and thermogenesis. In addition, leptin may serve as a mediator of the neuroendocrine response to
starvation
, and may modulate the stress response and the timing of puberty. A role for leptin in development is suggested by the presence of neuroendocrine and structural neuronal abnormalities in ob/ob mice with genetic leptin deficiency. Here, we sought to determine the ontogeny of leptin expression and its relationship to the developing neuroendocrine axis.
Leptin
increased 5-10-fold in female mice during the second postnatal week independent of fat mass, and declined after weaning. The rise in leptin preceded the establishment of adult levels of corticosterone, thyroxine, and estradiol. In contrast to adult mice, leptin was not acutely regulated by food deprivation during the early postnatal period. Circadian rhythms of leptin, corticosterone, and thyroxine were regulated by food intake in adult mice. When ad libitum feeding was restricted to the light cycle, peak corticosterone levels were shifted to the beginning of the light cycle and coincided with the nadir of leptin. The inverse relationship between leptin and corticosterone was maintained such that a rise in leptin after feeding was associated with a decline in corticosterone. To determine whether changes in corticosterone during food restriction are mediated by leptin, we compared the patterns of corticosterone levels among ob/ob, db/db, and lean mice. Despite their higher basal levels of corticosterone, leptin deficiency in ob/ ob mice did not prevent the nocturnal rise in corticosterone. In contrast, the nocturnal surge of corticosterone was blunted in db/db mice. Therefore, it is likely that factors in addition to leptin are involved in the regulation of the circadian rhythm of corticosterone. The temporal relationship between leptin and other hormones in neonatal and adult mice suggests that leptin is involved in the maturation and function of the neuroendocrine axis.
...
PMID:Postnatal leptin surge and regulation of circadian rhythm of leptin by feeding. Implications for energy homeostasis and neuroendocrine function. 948 72
Serum leptin levels are low in untreated anorexia nervosa, but studies of the exact relationship between leptin and body weight and the impact of refeeding in anorectics are limited. Therefore, we studied serum leptin, insulin-like growth factor I, and other endocrine parameters in female anorectics before and after gaining weight and in female normal body weight controls.
Leptin
levels in untreated anorectics were significantly lower than those in normal body weight controls (3.6 +/- 1.6 vs. 12.0 +/- 6.9 ng/mL; P < 0.001), and they uncoupled from body weight in a nonlinear relationship, suggesting a threshold effect at lowest body weights.
Leptin
increased significantly with refeeding (5.6 +/- 3.8 ng/mL; P < 0.01). The significant linear correlations of leptin with body mass index in the anorectics after weight gain and in normal body weight controls (r = 0.69; P < 0.001 and r = 0.76; P < 0.001, respectively) are consistent with a normal physiological increase in leptin with weight gain.
Leptin
and insulin-like growth factor I were highly correlated, even after controlling for body weight (r = 0.63; P = 0.001) during
starvation
, but were no longer significantly correlated after body weight gain in the anorectics or the normal body weight controls. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the relationship of leptin to neuroendrocrine abnormalities seen in
starvation
and to determine a possible contribution of leptin to difficulties with weight restoration in anorexia nervosa.
...
PMID:Leptin in anorexia nervosa. 1037 43
Chicken is characterized by a relative insulin resistance and a physiological hyperglycemia (2g/L) and is also subjected to fattening. Fat deposits in chicken, as in mammals, are regulated by environmental and genetic factors. In mammals, leptin, an adipose cell-specific secreted protein has been characterized that is encoded by ob gene.
Leptin
regulates satiety through hypothalamic specific receptors, energy balance, energy efficiency and contributes to adaptation to
starvation
. The leptin gene has been characterized in various mammalian species, and the cloning and sequencing of the chicken leptin gene (ob gene) are reported. Using RT-PCR and primers flanking the coding region of the leptin gene selected from known mammalian sequences, we have successfully amplified a 600-bp fragment from chicken liver and adipose tissue total ARNs. The amplified fragment exhibits a similar size to that of the coding region of the mammalian leptin gene. The sequences of the coding region of chicken liver and adipose tissue are identical and presented 97%, 96% and 83% similarity to the mouse, rat and human sequences, respectively. Finally, this is the first report showing that leptin gene expression in chicken is not exclusively localized in adipose tissue but is also expressed in liver. The expression of leptin in liver may be associated with a key role of this organ in avian species in controlling lipogenesis.
...
PMID:Cloning the chicken leptin gene. 952 75
The effects of leptin on the levels of CRF messenger RNA (mRNA) in the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVN), on the activation of the PVN CRF cells, and on the plasma levels of corticosterone were investigated in lean (+/?) and obese (ob/ob) C57BL/6J male mice. Murine leptin was s.c. infused using osmotic minipumps. The treatment period extended to 7 days, and the daily dose of leptin delivered was 100 microg/kg. The mice were killed either in a fed state or following 24 h of total food deprivation. The
starvation
paradigm was employed to enhance the activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in obese mice. In situ hybridization histochemistry was performed to determine the PVN levels of CRF mRNA and the arcuate nucleus levels of neuropeptide Y mRNA. The activity of the PVN CRF cells was estimated from the number of PVN cells colocalizing CRF mRNA and the protein Fos.
Leptin
led to a reduction in body weight gain and fat deposition. These effects were seen in both +/? and ob/ob mice and were observed to be particularly striking in obese mutants, in which leptin also caused an important reduction in food intake.
Leptin
also was found to affect plasma levels of corticosterone. It lowered the high corticosterone levels of obese mutants, an effect that appeared more evident in food-deprived than in fed mice. Finally, leptin prevented the induction of CRF synthesis in the PVN and the activation of the PVN CRF neurons observed in food-deprived ob/ob mice and hindered the elevation of arcuate nucleus neuropeptide Y synthesis in ob/ob mice. Together these results suggest a role for leptin in the excessive response of the hypophysiotropic CRF system of the ob/ob mouse.
...
PMID:Effects of leptin on corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) synthesis and CRF neuron activation in the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus of obese (ob/ob) mice. 952 30
The description of the adipose tissue hormone leptin has led to important discoveries.
Leptin
plays a role not only in the regulation of metabolic efficiency, energy expenditure, food intake and adiposity, but also contributes greatly to the adaptation of the organism to
starvation
. Much of the literature has focused on the physiologic roles of leptin-driven processes as diverse as feeding behavior, body weight, defense to
starvation
and reproduction. The following discussion summarizes knowledge that has accumulated regarding the interaction between leptin and the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis.
...
PMID:The interaction between leptin and the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis. 966 78
Leptin
is a protein encoded by the ob gene and expressed in adipocytes. A sensitive marker of nutritional status, leptin is known to correlate with fat mass and to respond to changes in caloric intake.
Leptin
may also be an important mediator of reproductive function, as suggested by the effects of leptin infusions to restore ovulatory function in an animal model of
starvation
. We hypothesized that leptin levels are decreased in women with hypothalamic amenorrhea and that leptin may be a sensitive marker of overall nutritional status in this population. We, therefore, measured leptin levels and caloric intake in 21 women with hypothalamic amenorrhea (HA) and 30 age-, weight-, and body fat-matched eumenorrheic controls. Age (24 +/- 5 vs. 24 +/- 3 yr), body mass index (20.6 +/- 1.3 vs. 21.1 +/- 1.5 kg/m2), percent ideal body weight (94.9 +/- 5% vs. 96.3 +/- 6.3%), and fat mass (14.2 +/- 3.6 vs. 15.5 +/- 2.9 kg, determined by dual energy x-ray absortiometry) did not differ between the groups.
Leptin
levels were significantly lower in the HA subjects compared with those in the controls (7.1 +/- 3.0 vs. 10.6 +/- 4.9 micrograms/L; P = 0.005). Total caloric intake (1768 +/- 335 vs. 2215 +/- 571 cal/day; P = 0.003), fat intake (333 +/- 144 vs. 639 +/- 261 cal/day; P < 0.0001), and insulin levels (5.6 +/- 1.2 vs. 7.4 +/- 3.2 microU/mL; P = 0.015) were lower in the women with HA than in the eumenorrheic controls. The difference in leptin levels remained significant after controlling for insulin (P = 0.023). These data are the first to demonstrate hypoleptinemia, independent of fat mass, in women with HA. The hypoleptinemia may reflect inadequate calorie intake, fat intake, and/or other subclinical nutritional disturbances in women with HA. The mechanism and reproductive consequences of low leptin in this large population of women remain unknown.
...
PMID:Decreased leptin levels in normal weight women with hypothalamic amenorrhea: the effects of body composition and nutritional intake. 966
Nutritional deprivation suppresses immune function. The cloning of the obese gene and identification of its protein product leptin has provided fundamental insight into the hypothalamic regulation of body weight. Circulating levels of this adipocyte-derived hormone are proportional to fat mass but maybe lowered rapidly by fasting or increased by inflammatory mediators. The impaired T-cell immunity of mice now known to be defective in leptin (ob/ob) or its receptor (db/db), has never been explained. Impaired cell-mediated immunity and reduced levels of leptin are both features of low body weight in humans. Indeed, malnutrition predisposes to death from infectious diseases. We report here that leptin has a specific effect on T-lymphocyte responses, differentially regulating the proliferation of naive and memory T cells.
Leptin
increased Th1 and suppressed Th2 cytokine production. Administration of leptin to mice reversed the immunosuppressive effects of acute
starvation
. Our findings suggest a new role for leptin in linking nutritional status to cognate cellular immune function, and provide a molecular mechanism to account for the immune dysfunction observed in
starvation
.
...
PMID:Leptin modulates the T-cell immune response and reverses starvation-induced immunosuppression. 973 73
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