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Evidence for a Non-leptin System that Defends against Weight Gain in Overfeeding.

Citation
Ravussin, Y., et al. “Evidence For A Non-Leptin System That Defends Against Weight Gain In Overfeeding.”. Cell Metabolism, pp. 289-299.e5.
Center Columbia University
Author Yann Ravussin, Ethan Edwin, Molly Gallop, Lumei Xu, Alberto Bartolome, Michael J Kraakman, Charles A LeDuc, Anthony W Ferrante
Keywords Adipose tissue, leptin, obesity, weight regulation
Abstract

Weight is defended so that increases or decreases in body mass elicit responses that favor restoration of one's previous weight. While much is known about the signals that respond to weight loss and the central role that leptin plays, the lack of experimental systems studying the overfed state has meant little is known about pathways defending against weight gain. We developed a system to study this physiology and found that overfed mice defend against increased weight gain with graded anorexia but, unlike weight loss, this response is independent of circulating leptin concentration. In overfed mice that are unresponsive to orexigenic stimuli, adipose tissue is transcriptionally and immunologically distinct from fat of ad libitum-fed obese animals. These findings provide evidence that overfeeding-induced obesity alters adipose tissue and central responses in ways that are distinct from ad libitum obesity and activates a non-leptin system to defend against weight gain.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell metabolism
Volume
28
Issue
2
Number of Pages
289-299.e5
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1932-7420
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2018.05.029
Alternate Journal
Cell Metab.
PMID
29937378
PMCID
PMC6082718
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