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Leptin and the maintenance of elevated body weight

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 95-105

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nrn.2017.168

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Funding

  1. Michigan Diabetes Research Center [P30 DK020572]
  2. American Diabetes Association
  3. Marilyn H. Vincent Foundation
  4. US National Institutes of Health [DK56731, DK78056]
  5. Cell and Molecular Biology (CMB) Training Grant [T32GM007315]

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Obesity represents the single most important risk factor for early disability and death in developed societies, and the incidence of obesity remains at staggering levels. CNS systems that modulate energy intake and expenditure in response to changes in body energy stores serve to maintain constant body adiposity; the adipocyte-derived hormone leptin and its receptor (LEPR) represent crucial regulators of these systems. As in the case of insulin resistance, a variety of mechanisms (including feedback inhibition, inflammation, gliosis and endoplasmic reticulum stress) have been proposed to interfere with leptin action and impede the systems that control body energy homeostasis to promote or maintain obesity, although the relative importance and contribution of each of these remain unclear. However, LEPR signalling may be increased (rather than impaired) in common obesity, suggesting that any obesity-associated defects in leptin action must result from lesions somewhere other than the initial LEPR signal. It is also possible that increased LEPR signalling could mediate some of the obesity-associated changes in hypothalamic function.

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