+ All Categories
Home > Education > Obesity and leptin...

Obesity and leptin...

Date post: 15-Jan-2017
Category:
Upload: pulak-das
View: 401 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
26
Obesity and Leptin Presented by Dr.Pulak Ranjan Das 2 nd year PGT Dept.of Biochemistry , BMC&H
Transcript
Page 1: Obesity and leptin...

Obesity and Leptin

Presented by Dr.Pulak Ranjan Das

2nd year PGT Dept.of Biochemistry , BMC&H

Page 2: Obesity and leptin...

INTRODUCTION

• obesity is increased body weight due to excess deposition of fat.• Global scenario .• Body can deal with excess fat in three ways.• Adipose tissue has important endocrine functions.• It is measured by BMI = weight in kg (height in meter )2 provides a relative weight adjusted for height.• Anatomical distribution in fat deposition can be measured by waist-to-hip

ratio. upper abdominal obesity- men >1.0, women >o.8 lower abdominal obesity- men<1.0 women <0.8

Page 3: Obesity and leptin...
Page 4: Obesity and leptin...
Page 5: Obesity and leptin...

INTRODUCTION cont…

• With abdominal obesity , there Is increased release of FFT and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines , such as interleukin 6 , from adipose tissue which are enter into portal circulation and causes hyperlipidemia and increased insulin resistance.

• On the otherhand FFT from lower body adipose depot enter the general circulation, where they can be oxidized in muscle and therefore reach in liver in lower concentration.

Page 6: Obesity and leptin...

The discovery of leptin

• A strain of mice gene called obese, or OB gene, was first discovered in 1950 by researchers at The Jackson Laboratory. A recessive mutation (ob)causes these mice to be massively obese: they weigh three times as much as normal mice, and their appetite is insatiable.

• The existence of leptin hormone that functions to control appetite and feeding behavior, was hypothesized by D.L. Coleman in 1978, almost 20years before advances in molecular biology allowed for the isolation of the hormone and the identification of its associated gene.

• Coleman derived his hypothesis from the interpretation of experiments he performed with mice harboring a genetic mutation called db.

Page 7: Obesity and leptin...

• Mice with this mutation, called db/db mice, are obese, diabetic, and hyperphagic (exhibit uncontrolled eating).

• When Coleman connected the circulatory system of a lean mouse with the circulatory system of a db/db mouse (referred to as “parabiosis”), the lean mouse eventually died of starvation,

• while the db/db mouse lived on, unaffected.

• In order to explain this result, Coleman hypothesized that the db/db mice produce a circulating molecule that, when introduced to the lean mouse via parabiosis, causes the lean mouse to cease eating, eventually leading to death by starvation.

Page 8: Obesity and leptin...

• Subsequent research confirmed Coleman’s hypothesis: db/db mice produce abnormally large quantities of leptin, and the introduction of these large quantities of hormone to the circulatory system of lean mice precipitates their starvation and eventual death

• In addition to his studies with the db mutation, Coleman also studied mice with a different genetic mutation, occurring on a different chromosome, called OB.

• Mice with this mutation, called ob/ob mice, are obese, diabetic, and hyperphagic, just like db/db mice.

Page 9: Obesity and leptin...

Results of three parabiosis experiments: db/db with lean, db/db with ob/ob, and lean with ob/ob.

Experiment 1 db/db: no change observedLean: hypophagia, hypoinsulinemia, and hypoglycemia. Death by starvation.

Experiment 2 db/db: no change observedob/ob: hypophagia, hypoinsulinemia, hypoglycemia, and reduction in adipose tissue mass. Death by starvation

Experiment 3 Lean: no change observedob/ob: normalization of eating behavior, blood glucose levels, and circulating insulin levels. Reduction in adipose tissue mass.

Page 10: Obesity and leptin...
Page 11: Obesity and leptin...

Leptin• A peptide hormone. • 167 aa residue• 16 kd• OB Gene encodes leptin ,Located in chr no 7 in human.• Secreted dominantly by adipocytes and little amount

intestinal wall, placenta etc.• Shows diurnal variation.• Discovered by Dr. Jeffrey Friedman’s team on 1994. • Derived the name from Greek word Leptos- thin• Product of OB gene.• DB gene encodes leptin receptor.

Page 12: Obesity and leptin...

Leptin synthesis

• White adipose tissue (WAT) is the main site of leptin synthesis, but it is now evident that it is also produced in other tissues , including placenta, ovaries, skeletal muscle and stomach and brown adipose tissue as well.

• Transcription of the leptin gene in mice yields a mRNA of ~3.5 kb that is expressed primarily in adipose tissues, but recent studies have confirmed that some other tissues also express leptin.

• In humans, leptin is encoded by a gene located in human chromosome 7q31.3 and is similar to that in rodents.

Page 13: Obesity and leptin...

Leptin synthesis cont…

• Leptin is translated as a 167 amino acid protein with an amino-terminal secretory signal sequence of 21 amino acids.

• The signal sequence is functional, and results in the trans-location of leptin into microsomes with the subsequent removal of the signal peptide.

• Therefore, leptin circulates in the blood as protein of 146 amino acid residues

Page 14: Obesity and leptin...

Structure of leptin4 antiparallel helices each about

5-6 turn longTwo long loops connecting helices A-B and C-D, shorter loop connecting helices B-C. Resembles member of helical cytokine family Two cysteine residues at the 96 and 146 position Disulphide bridge and kink in the D-helix are a essential for proper folding and receptor binding.

Page 15: Obesity and leptin...

Regulations of food intake and energy expenditure

Page 16: Obesity and leptin...

Leptin stimulates production of anorexigenic peptide hormones

Page 17: Obesity and leptin...
Page 18: Obesity and leptin...

Neuronal Way of regulates thermogenesis by action of leptin?

Page 19: Obesity and leptin...
Page 20: Obesity and leptin...

Leptin recepters

• Leptin acts on receptors in the lateral hypothalamus to inhibit hunger and the medial hypothalamus to stimulate satiety.

• In the lateral hypothalamus, leptin inhibits hunger by counteracting the effects of neuropeptide Y.

• In the medial hypothalamus, leptin stimulates satiety by promoting the synthesis of α-MSH, a hunger suppressant .

• Thus, a lesion in the lateral hypothalamus causes anorexia (due to a lack of hunger signals) and a lesion in the medial hypothalamus causes excessive hunger (due to a lack of satiety signals)

Page 21: Obesity and leptin...
Page 22: Obesity and leptin...

How leptin act over the receptor ?

Page 23: Obesity and leptin...

Jak-stat mechanism of leptin signal transduction in hypothalamus.

Page 24: Obesity and leptin...

Serum leptin detection• Serum leptin Can be detected by ELISA , • HPLC method.

Page 25: Obesity and leptin...

Clinical utility

• OB gene mutant/ defective ,Leptin deficient obese

persons are benefitted with leptin injection.

• DB gene mutant/ defective obese persons are

benefitted with combined leptin and amylin therapy.

Weight reduction as much as 13%.

• Leptin increases insulin sensitivity to receptor but

high level causes resistance.

• Leptin resumes fertility in leptin deficient.

Page 26: Obesity and leptin...

Thank you


Recommended