4.6 Article

Differential effects of leptin administration on the abundance of UCP2 and glucocorticoid action during neonatal development

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AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00228.2005

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lung; neonate; mitochondria; uncoupling protein-2

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In the neonate, adipose tissue and the lung both undergo a rapid transition after birth, which results in dramatic changes in uncoupling protein abundance and glucocorticoid action. Leptin potentially mediates some of these adaptations and is known to promote the loss of uncoupling protein (UCP)1, but its effects on other mitochondrial proteins or glucocorticoid action are not known. We therefore determined the effects of acute and chronic administration of ovine recombinant leptin on brown adipose tissue (BAT) and/or lung in neonatal sheep. For the acute study, eight pairs of 1-day-old lambs received, sequentially, 10, 100, and 100 mu g of leptin or vehicle before tissue sampling 4 h from the start of the study, whereas in the chronic study, nine pairs of 1-day-old lambs received 100 mu g of leptin or vehicle daily for 6 days before tissue sampling on day 7. Acute leptin decreased the abundance of UCP2, glucocorticoid receptor, and 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta-HSD) type 1 mRNA and increased 11 beta-HSD type 2 mRNA abundance in BAT, a pattern that was reversed with chronic leptin administration, which also diminished lung UCP2 protein abundance. In BAT, UCP2 mRNA abundance was positively correlated to plasma leptin and nonesterified fatty acids and negatively correlated to mean colonic temperature in the leptin group at 7 days. In conclusion, leptin administration to the neonatal lambs causes differential effects on UCP2 abundance in BAT and lung. These effects may be important in the development of these tissues, thereby optimizing lung function and fat growth.

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