Leptin-Signaling Failure Could Cause Obesity in White Men

Posted on 2003-11-10 23:16:52 in Weight and Obesity |

By Barbra Rodriguez


Leptin keeps rats and mice slim. But to the chagrin of drug companies, many humans don't respond to extra doses of the hormone, which influences fat metabolism and serves as a natural appetite supressant.

Now a team of researchers including members from Washington University School of Medicine has evidence that drug developers might have better luck focusing their leptin-related efforts on white men. In a statistical study of 115 black and 99 white families, the researchers determined that middle-aged white men who share a particular version of the molecule that receives the leptin signal were fatter than other volunteers.

Fat cells produce leptin to tell the body it has enough energy in reserve and can stop storing fat and decrease appetite. Leptin does this by traveling in the bloodstream to the brain, where it interacts with the leptin receptor molecule in the hypothalamus. This part of the brain then sends out a message to the body to alter how fat is metabolized.

A modified version of the receptor that appears in some white men might not respond well to leptin so that these men might begin to accumulate excess fat. "There appears to be a good association in these men between a modification of the leptin receptor and fatness based on various measures," said Ingrid B. Borecki, Ph.D.

The article was published in the January 2000 issue of Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. Borecki, an associate professor of biostatistics, and Dabeeru C. Rao, Ph.D., director of the Division of Biostatistics, both at Washington University, were co-authors. The study was led by Yvon C. Chagnon, Ph.D., at Laval University in Quebec, and Claude Bouchard, Ph.D., who recently left Laval to direct the Pennington Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La.

Previous studies involving people with differing lifestyles and genetic backgrounds had come up with mixed conclusions about the importance of leptin signaling in weight gain and obesity.

In the current study, volunteers shared a similar sedentary lifestyle and were about to begin a 20-week exercise training program as part of the HERITAGE Family Study. The 214 families included 88 black parents and 231 of their adult children and 192 white parents and 330 of their adult children. Neither group differed significantly in the proportion of participants who were skinny, of normal weight or obese.

The researchers measured leptin levels in sedentary volunteers' blood. Fat levels also were assessed in six ways, including weighing volunteers under water to determine the proportion of body weight that was fat and measuring skin-fold thicknesses. Volunteers' DNA also was purified from blood samples for further analysis, using three different markers within the leptin receptor.

All the receptor versions were present in blacks and whites. However, only white volunteers who inherited one particular version, Q223R, tended to carry extra weight for their height, a measure of fatness called the body-mass index. A closer look revealed that white fathers were most likely to carry extra fat when they had the seemingly unlucky version of the leptin receptor. This finding held true for five of the six measures of fatness.


Getting a grip
The Q223R receptor and the other versions studied interact with leptin the way a pair of tongs latches onto an ice cube. Because Q223R differs in a region equivalent to the end of one tong, Borecki suspects that this receptor doesn't grab leptin as well. "If the receptor were the right shape, it should have no difficulty attaching to leptin and allowing its biological actions to occur," Borecki said.
Women have a different hormonal environment than men, or there may be other genetically based differences that help protect them from weight gain if they have Q223R, Borecki noted. Black men who have Q223R also may overcome this drawback because of genetic differences that give them an advantage over their white counterparts. "This really goes to show you that the systems that govern obesity in humans are fairly complicated," Borecki said.

Why are white male children spared, though? Borecki suspects they aren't. They might overcome their genetic drawback because they are more active than their fathers. Some of the younger children participating also might have been undergoing growth spurts and hormonal changes that could obscure the pattern of results found in the adults.

Future studies that involve white men ages 25 and older should help clarify whether they share their fathers' propensity to put on the pounds. Because leptin also helps control how the body uses energy, the hormone's ability to influence metabolism in general also is under intense investigation. Borecki noted that the current study already has helped clarify the leptin story, though. She added, "Once we get a grip on a handful of factors that affect weight gain and study all of them in a collection of families, I think a fascinating picture is going to emerge."

SOURCE/REFERENCE: Washington University in St. Louis Record, 6th April 2000.

Health Headlines MORE »

For every 10 g per day increase in soluble fiber intake, a woman may reduce her risk of breast cancer by up to 26%.
Peptides from soybeans modulate neurotransmitters, thereby helping to boost circulation in the brain.
Capsaicin (found in hot peppers) and capsiates (present in sweet peppers) exert modest weight management benefits.
While over 20% of U.S. adults receive periodic health examinations each year, many do not receive recommended preventive screening tests and counseling services
Researchers from Norway suggest a mechanism by which stress may make a person fat, and being obese may create stress.
Swedish researchers report that people who are short on sleep experience greater levels of hunger.
Among women with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), regular physical activity helps to reduce anxiety, irritability, feelings of tension, low energy and pain.
For every 100 mg per-day increase in magnesium in the diet, stroke risk may decline by up to 9%.
The best male marathon runners over age 65, and the best female marathon runners over age 45, continue to consistently improve their performance.
UCLA-led team safely uses human embryonic stem cells to treat macular degeneration.
ANTI-AGING TIP OF THE DAY
In Working Order
Men and women who stay mentally engaged in their original occupational field fare after retirement fare best mentally. University of Maryland (Maryland, USA) researchers studied 12,189 retired men and women, ages 51 to 61 years at the beginning of the study. The team revealed that those retirees who continued to work in a bridge job experienced fewer major diseases...