Ghrelin is a novel growth hormone؊releasing peptide isolated from human and rat stomach that induces weight gain by increasing food intake and reducing fat utilization. Although recent data indicate that ghrelin is downregulated in human adult obesity, the characteristics of human obesity are heterogeneous, especially in children and adolescents, and depend on the distribution of subcutaneous and visceral fat tissue. We measured fasting plasma ghrelin concentrations by radioimmunoassay in 49 obese Japanese children and adolescents (38 boys and 11 girls; mean age 10.2 ؎ 2.8 years; BMI 28.0 ؎ 4.5 kg/m 2 , percent overweight 56.0 ؎ 20.7%), and analyzed associations of their ghrelin concentrations with their body composition, insulin resistance, and adipocytokine concentrations. Fasting plasma ghrelin levels were negatively correlated with BMI and waist circumference, but not with percent overweight or percent body fat, whereas fasting leptin levels were positively correlated with all of the following parameters: BMI, waist circumference, percent overweight, and percent body fat. Plasma ghrelin levels were negatively correlated with fasting immunoreactive insulin, homeostasis model assessment insulin resistance index, and quantitative insulin sensitivity check index values. There was no correlation between plasma ghrelin and leptin, but ghrelin was negatively correlated with the PAI-1 concentrations. The results suggest that the downregulation of ghrelin secretion may be a consequence of higher insulin resistance associated with visceral fat accumulation and elevated PAI-1 concentrations, and not a consequence of total body fat accumulation associated with elevated leptin concentrations.
Objective: Childhood onset Graves’ disease (GD) has been documented to be clinically distinct from adult onset GD, and an association with the genes encoding HLA and CTLA-4 (cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4) has been reported in both Caucasian and Japanese adult GD patients. The aim of this study was to determine whether HLA-DR, -DQ and CTLA-4 are associated with childhood onset GD in Japanese individuals. Methods: We investigated the genotype of HLA class II (DRB1, DQB1) and the A/G transition polymorphism of CTLA-4 exon 1 position 49 in 43 GD patients and in healthy controls for comparison. The CTLA-4 alleles were identified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of genomic DNA and restriction fragment-length polymorphism analysis (PCR-RFLP) with Ita1. Results: The frequency of both HLA-DRB1*0405 and DQB1*0401 was increased in the patient group (DRB1*0405: 26.7%, p < 0.001; DQB1*0401: 25.6%, p < 0.005) compared with the controls. Patients with GD had a significantly lower frequency of the AA genotype of CTLA-4 than the controls, but there was no difference in allele frequency between the G and A allele. Conclusions: the association of HLA-DRB1 and DQB1 genotype with susceptibility to childhood onset GD differs from that in adult onset GD, whereas the association between CTLA-4 gene polymorphism and childhood onset GD is similar to that in adult onset GD in Japanese individuals, but the association is weak.
In iodine-sufficient areas, maternal T₄ deficiency in early pregnancy does not necessarily affect neurodevelopment. Therefore, other potential factors altering neurodevelopment, such as iodine deficiency, must be investigated.
Background and Objective: Ghrelin is a novel gastric peptide which stimulates GH secretion and has been demonstrated to have orexigenic and adipogenic properties. Insulin is a physiological and dynamic modulator of plasma ghrelin, and insulinemia possibly mediates the effect of the nutritional state on the plasma concentrations of ghrelin in adults. No data on the regulation of GH secretion by ghrelin have so far been reported, nor has the possible influence of hypoglycemia on the plasma ghrelin levels in children been reported. Methods: Provocative studies were performed using a variety of stimuli, including insulin-induced hypoglycemia, and glucagon, arginine and L-dopa loading. We studied a group of 27 children with short stature being investigated for GH deficiency (10 F, 17 M; age 4–14 years; height SDS –0.92 to –3.27); the subjects were instructed to fast overnight, and the following morning, the relationships among the plasma ghrelin, GH and glucose levels were investigated by determining the plasma ghrelin profiles during those provocative tests. Using a new method for determining the two types of ghrelin, samples were obtained for determination of the plasma ghrelin, serum glucose and serum GH levels after the administration of the aforementioned stimulating agents. Results: All the four stimuli caused a significant decrease in the circulating C- and N-ghrelin levels with a nadir at +30 min, with the exception of the N-ghrelin level following the L-dopa loading. During the same period, the plasma GH level increased following insulin, arginine and L-dopa loading, and the plasma glucose level increased significantly following glucagon loading. In the arginine and L-dopa load connected, a significant correlation was observed between the 30-min change in the serum GH level and the 30-min change in the plasma C-ghrelin level. In the multiple regression analysis to explain the 30-min change in the plasma level of C-ghrelin, the baseline plasma level of C-ghrelin (basal), height and % overweight were the only three significant parameters, accounting for 85.2% of the variance. Conclusion: This study demonstrated that the inverse relation between the circulating GH and ghrelin levels may indicate the existence of a feedback loop, and also lends support to the assumption of a GH-independent relationship between plasma ghrelin and glucose levels. These observations constitute further evidence to suggest that peripheral ghrelin is a direct growth-promoting hormone.
We demonstrate that AN is a useful clinical marker for the severity of obesity associated with a high BMI, and that B2ADR Gly16 and B3ADR Arg64 are associated synergistically with AN in obese children and adolescents.
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