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Departments of 1 Surgery and 2 Neuroscience, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida 32610
The
ob gene product leptin is known to
produce anorexia and loss of body fat when chronically administered to
both lean and genetically obese mice. The current study was undertaken
to examine whether administration of recombinant leptin in quantities
sufficient to produce decreases in food intake and body weight and
alterations in body composition would elicit either an hepatic acute
phase protein response or preferential loss of carcass lean tissue. Mice were administered increasing quantities of recombinant human leptin or human tumor necrosis factor-
as a positive control. Although leptin (at 10 mg/kg body wt) produced significant anorexia and
weight loss (both P < 0.05), human
leptin administration did not appear to induce an hepatic acute phase
protein response in either lean or genetically obese mice, as
determined by protein synthetic rates in the liver or changes in the
plasma concentration of the murine acute phase protein reactants,
amyloid A, amyloid P, or seromucoid
(
1-acid glycoprotein). In
addition, human leptin administration did not induce a loss of fat-free
dry mass (protein) in lean or obese animals. The findings suggest that
at doses adequate to alter food intake and body weight leptin is not a
significant inducer of the hepatic acute phase response nor does leptin
promote the preferential loss of somatic protein characteristic of a
chronic inflammatory process.
tumor necrosis factor; mouse; liver; cachexia
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R. FAGGIONI, K. R. FEINGOLD, and C. GRUNFELD Leptin regulation of the immune response and the immunodeficiency of malnutrition FASEB J, December 1, 2001; 15(14): 2565 - 2571. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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