Leptin Treatment Rescues the Sterility of Genetically Obese ob/ob Males

K Mounzih, R Lu, FF Chehab - Endocrinology, 1997 - academic.oup.com
K Mounzih, R Lu, FF Chehab
Endocrinology, 1997academic.oup.com
Leptin, a hormone secreted from white adipose tissue, has been shown to normalize the
body weight of ob/ob but not db/db mice as postulated by Coleman in his classical
parabiosis experiments. The major effect of leptin is therefore to decrease food intake, thus
resulting in a breakdown of fat stores. Recently, we have suggested that leptin plays a role in
reproductive physiology based on the observation that leptin treatment but not food
restriction rescues the sterility of ob/ob females. In the present communication, we treated …
Abstract
Leptin, a hormone secreted from white adipose tissue, has been shown to normalize the body weight of ob/ob but not db/db mice as postulated by Coleman in his classical parabiosis experiments. The major effect of leptin is therefore to decrease food intake, thus resulting in a breakdown of fat stores. Recently, we have suggested that leptin plays a role in reproductive physiology based on the observation that leptin treatment but not food restriction rescues the sterility of ob/ob females. In the present communication, we treated sterile ob/ob males with leptin and asked whether fertility could be induced, thus selecting their reproductive ability as the endpoint of the experiment. Our results show that all food-restricted ob/ob males are unable to impregnate normal C57BL/6J females. However, all leptin-treated ob/ob males fertilized normal females mice that carried out normal pregnancies and deliveries, demonstrating that the reproductive capacity of ob/ob males was corrected only with leptin treatment. Furthermore, reproductive indices such as testicular weight and histology are normalized in leptin-treated animals. Therefore, as in ob/ob females, leptin plays a significant role in the male mouse reproductive pathways.
Oxford University Press