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Endocrinology Vol. 140, No. 10 4426-4433
Copyright © 1999 by The Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Rats with Hypothalamic Obesity Are Insensitive to Central Leptin Injections1

SuJean Choi, Regina Sparks, Mark Clay and Mary F. Dallman

Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0444

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. SuJean Choi, Department of Physiology, Box 0444, 513 Parnassus Avenue, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0444. E-mail: suchoi{at}itsa.ucsf.edu

Genetically determined obesities, involving leptin- and melanocortin-signaling pathways, have focused attention on the four medial hypothalamic nuclei as primary sources of feeding- and metabolically-based obesity. All four medial cell groups contain leptin receptors. To determine which of these cell groups normally mediates the effects of leptin on food intake and body weight gain, we injected colchicine bilaterally into each nucleus and determined the pathophysiological effects of disruption and responsivity to leptin injected intracerebro-ventricularly. Intracerebroventricular injections of leptin in sham-lesioned rats decreased food intake during the dark period, but not during the light period. Lesions of the arcuate (ARC), paraventricular (PVN), and ventromedial (VMN) nuclei all resulted in leptin insensitivity; by contrast, lesions of the dorsomedial nuclei (DMN) augmented sensitivity to leptin on feeding and body weight gain. Although rats with ARC and PVN lesions were obese, they were still capable of reducing caloric efficiency over the 5 days of study and increasing uncoupling protein content in interscapular brown adipose tissue. Caloric efficiency and uncoupling protein content were unchanged in rats with VMN and DMN lesions. Finally, the slope of the relationship between leptin and mesenteric white adipose tissue was increased in rats with VMN lesions and abolished in rats with ARC lesions. Thus, lesions of the ARC, PVN, and VMN produced obesity via separate pathways. We conclude that the medial hypothalamic cell groups, each with a different role in energy balance, are all necessary for normal leptin responsiveness.




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