Oral treatment with oleoyl-estrone resulted in the specific dose-related loss of fat reserves with little change to other metabolic parameters. These results agree with the postulated role of oleoyl-estrone as a ponderostat signal.
Young female rats of 160-180 g were implanted with osmotic minipumps releasing 3.0 micromol/day per kg of oleoyl-oestrone in liposomes (Merlin-2) into the bloodstream for up to 14 days. Merlin-2 induced a loss of appetite in the first days, later recovered, and a decrease in body weight of 7%, which contrasts with the 15% increase in controls during the 2-week period. Neither plasma glucose nor urea was affected by treatment, but liver glycogen increased by 50% in 14 days. Insulin decreased slightly with Merlin-2 treatment. Plasma corticotropin (ACTH) and corticosterone showed a transient increase by day 6 of treatment. The expression of the ob gene in adipose tissue fell during the period studied to practically nil on day 14; circulating leptin levels decreased more than 70% from day 1 to day 14. Oestrone levels increased from 0.3 nM (controls) to a maintained 40-60 nM level for the rest of the experiment. Oleoyl-oestrone levels first increased 4-fold, to decrease again to the initial levels on day 10, increasing later to 100-fold on day 14. The three phases observed in food intake, weight loss and oleoyl-oestrone levels match fairly well, which supports the direct involvement of oleoyl-oestrone in body-weight control. However, the control of oleoyl-oestrone levels seems to be mediated in part by corticosterone. The practical disappearance of leptin synthesis coincides with the massive accumulation of oleoyl-oestrone in plasma. The results presented suggest the involvement of oleoyl-oestrone in the main mechanisms of control of body weight and its regulation by glucocorticoids and leptin.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the slimming effects of treatment with oleoyl-estrone (OE) in liposomes of normal and obese rats are permanent, or disappear as soon as the treatment with the drug ceased. This study was devised to gain further knowledge on the postulated role of OE as a ponderostat signal, evaluating whether (in addition) it can lower the ponderostat setting of the rat. DESIGN: The rats were infused for 14 d (using osmotic minipumps) with oleoyl-estrone in liposomes at a dose of 3.5 m mmolakg Á Á d, and were studied up to one month after the treatment ceased. SUBJECTS: Young adult lean controls (CL) or treated (TL) and obese controls (CO) or treated (TO) Zucker rats. MEASUREMENTS: Energy balance, blood glucose, liver glycogen, plasma insulin, leptin corticosterone, ACTH and estrone (free and total) concentrations, and expression of the OB gene in white adipose tissue (WAT). RESULTS: The loss of body weight caused by OE was recovered quickly in the TO, which gained weight at the same rate as the CO. TL rats, however remained at the low weight attained for one month after the treatment ceased. However, no differences were observed in calculated energy expenditure (EE) between the TL and TC rats once treatment had stopped. In TL and TO rats, liver glycogen concentrations decreased to normal shortly after treatment ceased, and leptin expression and concentrations remained normal and unchanged after the end of OE treatment. In TO rats, plasma glucose, insulin and leptin were lower than in the CO. Total estrone concentrations decreased rapidly in TL rats and more slowly in the TO, and free estrone followed a similar pattern. CONCLUSION: Continuous infusion of liposomes loaded with OE resulted in a decreased energy intake (EI), maintenance of EE and the utilization of body fat reserves in lean and obese rats alike. This process ended in obese rats as soon as the infusion ceased, so that even when the levels of free and total estrone in plasma remained high, there was a marked (and relatively fast) shift toward the basal situation, which translated into an increase in EI, maintenance of estimated EE and a marked buildup of energy stores. In lean rats, the effects of OE on leptin concentrations and OB gene expression persisted after infusion ended.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.