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Novel mechanisms involved in leptin sensitization in obesity

Pena León, Verónica; Perez Lois, Raquel; Villalón, María; Prida, Eva; Muñoz Moreno, Diego; Fernø, Johan; Quiñones Téllez, María del Mar; AL-MASSADI IGLESIAS, OMAR; Seoane Camino, Luisa Maria
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/23261
PMID: 38490517
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2024.116129
ESSN: 1873-2968
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Biochem Pharmacol. 2024 May;223:116129 (1.291Mb)
VERSIÓN DEL EDITOR (63.34Kb)
Date issued
2024-05
Journal title
Biochemical Pharmacology
Type of content
Artigo
DeCS
leptina | hipotálamo | humanos | lactante | obesidad | tejido adiposo | metabolismo energético
MeSH
Leptin | Energy Metabolism | Hypothalamus | Humans | Adipose Tissue | Obesity | Infant
Abstract
[EN] Leptin is a hormone that is secreted by adipocytes in proportion to adipose tissue size, and that informs the brain about the energy status of the body. Leptin acts through its receptor LepRb, expressed mainly in the hypothalamus, and induces a negative energy balance by potent inhibition of feeding and activation of energy expenditure. These actions have led to huge expectations for the development of therapeutic targets for metabolic complications based on leptin-derived compounds. However, the majority of patients with obesity presents elevated leptin production, suggesting that in this setting leptin is ineffective in the regulation of energy balance. This resistance to the action of leptin in obesity has led to the development of "leptin sensitizers," which have been tested in preclinical studies. Much research has focused on generating combined treatments that act on multiple levels of the gastrointestinal-brain axis. The gastrointestinal-brain axis secretes a variety of different anorexigenic signals, such as uroguanylin, glucagon-like peptide-1, amylin, or cholecystokinin, which can alleviate the resistance to leptin action. Moreover, alternative mechanism such as pharmacokinetics, proteostasis, the role of specific kinases, chaperones, ER stress and neonatal feeding modifications are also implicated in leptin resistance. This review will cover the current knowledge regarding the interaction of leptin with different endocrine factors from the gastrointestinal-brain axis and other novel mechanisms that improve leptin sensitivity in obesity.

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