Interaction of leptin with its receptors resembles that of interleukin-6 and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, which interact with their receptors through binding sites I-III. Site III plays a pivotal role in receptors' dimerization or tetramerization and subsequent activation. Leptin's site III also mediates the formation of an active multimeric complex through its interaction with the IGD (immunoglobulin-like domain) of LEPRs (leptin receptors). Using a sensitive hydrophobic cluster analysis of leptin's and LEPR's sequences, we identified hydrophobic stretches in leptin's A-B loop (amino acids 39-42) and in the N-terminal end of LEPR's IGD (amino acids 325-328) that are predicted to participate in site III and to interact with each other in a beta-sheet-like configuration. To verify this hypothesis, we prepared and purified to homogeneity (as verified by SDS/PAGE, gel filtration and reverse-phase chromatography) several alanine muteins of amino acids 39-42 in human and ovine leptins. CD analyses revealed that those mutations hardly affect the secondary structure. All muteins acted as true antagonists, i.e. they bound LEPR with an affinity similar to the wild-type hormone, had no agonistic activity and specifically inhibited leptin action in several leptin-responsive in vitro bioassays. Alanine mutagenesis of LEPR's IGD (amino acids 325-328) drastically reduced its biological but not binding activity, indicating the importance of this region for interaction with leptin's site III. FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer) microscopy experiments have documented that the transient FRET signalling occurring upon exposure to leptin results not from binding of the ligand, but from ligand-induced oligomerization of LEPRs mediated by leptin's site III.
Adipocyte-epithelial cell interactions and their secretions are critical determinants of mammary gland development. In this present study, we examined the possible involvement of leptin and its receptors in the process of mammogenesis/ lactogenesis. We demonstrated by reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction analysis that long and short forms of leptin receptors were expressed in the ovine mammary gland during pregnancy and lactation. Furthermore, quantitative determinations, via ribonuclease protection assays, provided evidence that the level of leptin receptor expression was greatest during mid-pregnancy when active growth of the mammary gland is initiated. Location of the leptin receptors, as determined by in situ hybridization analysis, revealed that leptin receptor transcripts were expressed specifically in mammary epithelial cells. These data provide evidence that leptin, with its receptors, could be an important mediator in regulating mammary gland growth and development.z 1999 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
Low birth weight resulting from intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) is a risk factor for further development of metabolic diseases. The pig appears to reproduce nearly all of the phenotypic pathological consequences of human IUGR and is likely to be more relevant than rodents in studies of neonatal development. In the present work, we characterized the model of low-birth-weight piglets with particular attention to the hypothalamic leptin-sensitive system, and we tested whether postnatal leptin supplementation can reverse the precocious signs of adverse metabolic programming. Our results demonstrated that 1) IUGR piglets present altered postnatal growth and increased adiposity; 2) IUGR piglets exhibit abnormal hypothalamic distribution of leptin receptors that may be linked to further disturbance in food-intake behavior; and 3) postnatal leptin administration can partially reverse the IUGR phenotype by correcting growth rate, body composition, and development of several organs involved in metabolic regulation. We conclude that IUGR may be characterized by altered leptin receptor distribution within the hypothalamic structures involved in metabolic regulation and that leptin supplementation can partially reverse the IUGR phenotype. These results open interesting therapeutic perspectives in physiopathology for the correction of defects observed in IUGR.
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