Leptin in obesity
- 19 October 1996
- Vol. 313 (7063) , 953-954
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.313.7063.953
Abstract
The identification and sequencing of the mouse obese (ob) gene by Friedman's group in 19942 opened important new avenues in obesity research and have already led to overwhelming research activity.3 In homozygous ob/ob mice, the mutation of the ob gene results in increased food intake, reduced energy expenditure, elevated insulin and cortisol levels, and subsequently, in massive obesity and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.2 The ob gene encodes a protein, leptin, which is produced only in fat cells and secreted into the blood. There are two different strains of ob/ob mice: one with a mutation that establishes a stop codon within the ob gene, resulting in the production of a truncated, inactive protein; the other with a mutation that produces no protein at all.2 Administration of leptin corrects the multiple metabolic disturbances.4Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serum leptin concentration, obesity, and insulin resistance in Western Samoans: cross sectional studyBMJ, 1996
- Acute and Chronic Effect of Insulin on Leptin Production in Humans: Studies In Vivo and In VitroDiabetes, 1996
- Cerebrospinal fluid leptin levels: Relationship to plasma levels and to adiposity in humansNature Medicine, 1996
- Serum Immunoreactive-Leptin Concentrations in Normal-Weight and Obese HumansNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Abnormal splicing of the leptin receptor in diabetic miceNature, 1996
- The role of neuropeptide Y in the antiobesity action of the obese gene productNature, 1995
- Effects of the obese Gene Product on Body Weight Regulation in ob / ob MiceScience, 1995
- Increased expression in adipocytes of ob RNA in mice with lesions of the hypothalamus and with mutations at the db locus.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Evidence against either a premature stop codon or the absence of obese gene mRNA in human obesity.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- Positional cloning of the mouse obese gene and its human homologueNature, 1994