Differential role of melanocortins in mediating leptin's central effects on feeding and reproduction

JG Hohmann, TH Teal, DK Clifton… - American Journal …, 2000 - journals.physiology.org
JG Hohmann, TH Teal, DK Clifton, J Davis, VJ Hruby, G Han, RA Steiner
American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and …, 2000journals.physiology.org
Leptin serves as a humoral link coupling the status of energy reserves to the functional
activity of the reproductive system. Leptin is thought to act through melanocortinergic
pathways in the brain to regulate ingestive behaviors; however, whether melanocortins
mediate leptin's actions on the neuroendocrine-reproductive axis is unknown. We tested this
hypothesis first by determining whether the effects of leptin on feeding behavior and
reproduction in the ob/ob mouse could be blocked by the melanocortin receptor (MC-R) …
Leptin serves as a humoral link coupling the status of energy reserves to the functional activity of the reproductive system. Leptin is thought to act through melanocortinergic pathways in the brain to regulate ingestive behaviors; however, whether melanocortins mediate leptin's actions on the neuroendocrine-reproductive axis is unknown. We tested this hypothesis first by determining whether the effects of leptin on feeding behavior and reproduction in the ob/ob mouse could be blocked by the melanocortin receptor (MC-R) antagonist SHU9119 and second, by examining the effects of the MC-R agonist MTII on feeding and the endocrine-reproductive system. Administered by intracerebroventricular injections, leptin inhibited food intake, raised plasma gonadotropin levels, and increased seminal vesicle weights compared with controls; SHU9119 (intracerebroventricularly) attenuated leptin's effects on food intake and body weight but did not alter leptin's stimulatory effect on the reproductive axis. MTII (intracerebroventricularly and intraperitoneally) decreased food intake and increased body temperature compared with controls but had no effect on the reproductive-endocrine axis. These results suggest that although leptin acts centrally through melanocortinergic pathways to inhibit ingestive behaviors and stimulate metabolism, leptin's activational effect on the reproductive axis is likely to be mediated by other, unknown neuroendocrine circuits.
American Physiological Society