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Leptin-dependent neuronal NO signaling in the preoptic hypothalamus facilitates reproduction
Nicole Bellefontaine, … , Sebastien G. Bouret, Vincent Prevot
Nicole Bellefontaine, … , Sebastien G. Bouret, Vincent Prevot
Published May 8, 2014
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2014;124(6):2550-2559. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI65928.
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Research Article

Leptin-dependent neuronal NO signaling in the preoptic hypothalamus facilitates reproduction

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Abstract

The transition to puberty and adult fertility both require a minimum level of energy availability. The adipocyte-derived hormone leptin signals the long-term status of peripheral energy stores and serves as a key metabolic messenger to the neuroendocrine reproductive axis. Humans and mice lacking leptin or its receptor fail to complete puberty and are infertile. Restoration of leptin levels in these individuals promotes sexual maturation, which requires the pulsatile, coordinated delivery of gonadotropin-releasing hormone to the pituitary and the resulting surge of luteinizing hormone (LH); however, the neural circuits that control the leptin-mediated induction of the reproductive axis are not fully understood. Here, we found that leptin coordinated fertility by acting on neurons in the preoptic region of the hypothalamus and inducing the synthesis of the freely diffusible volume-based transmitter NO, through the activation of neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) in these neurons. The deletion of the gene encoding nNOS or its pharmacological inhibition in the preoptic region blunted the stimulatory action of exogenous leptin on LH secretion and prevented the restoration of fertility in leptin-deficient female mice by leptin treatment. Together, these data indicate that leptin plays a central role in regulating the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis in vivo through the activation of nNOS in neurons of the preoptic region.

Authors

Nicole Bellefontaine, Konstantina Chachlaki, Jyoti Parkash, Charlotte Vanacker, William Colledge, Xavier d’Anglemont de Tassigny, John Garthwaite, Sebastien G. Bouret, Vincent Prevot

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Figure 3

The pharmacological inhibition of nNOS with l-NAME prevents the rescue of the estrous cycle and LH levels by leptin in fasted mice.

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The pharmacological inhibition of nNOS with l-NAME prevents the rescue o...
(A) Representative 15-day estrous cycles of animals subjected or not to 24-hour fasting in diestrus 1 three days before death (gray shadow). Mice were subjected to leptin (red arrows), l-NAME (blue arrows), or vehicle (white arrows) injection twice daily on diestrus 1 three days before death. Each circle represents 1 day. Di, diestrus; P, proestrus; E, estrus. (B) Leptin treatment in fasting mice rescued proestrous-like uterine weight (UW), whereas concomitant l-NAME injection blunted this effect. (C) Leptin treatment restores surge levels of LH in mice subjected to 24-hour fasting in diestrus 1 and killed on the expected day of proestrus, i.e., 2 days after. l-NAME treatment impedes this leptin-rescuing effect in fasting mice. *P < 0.05, ***P < 0.001, leptin vs. vehicle.

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