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Identification of the leptin receptor sequences crucial for the STAT3-Independent control of metabolism.

Citation
Barnes, T. M., et al. “Identification Of The Leptin Receptor Sequences Crucial For The Stat3-Independent Control Of Metabolism.”. Molecular Metabolism, pp. 168-175.
Center University of Michigan
Author Tammy M Barnes, Kimi Shah, Margaret B Allison, Gabrielle K Steinl, Desiree Gordian, Paul Sabatini V, Abigail J Tomlinson, Wenwen Cheng, Justin C Jones, Qing Zhu, Chelsea Faber, Martin G Myers
Keywords diabetes, Leptin receptor, obesity, STAT3, Truncation mutant
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Leptin acts via its receptor, LepRb, on specialized neurons in the brain to modulate energy balance and glucose homeostasis. LepRb→STAT3 signaling plays a crucial role in leptin action, but LepRb also mediates an additional as-yet-unidentified signal (Signal 2) that is important for leptin action. Signal 2 requires LepRb regions in addition to those required for JAK2 activation but operates independently of STAT3 and LepRb phosphorylation sites.

METHODS: To identify LepRb sequences that mediate Signal 2, we used CRISPR/Cas9 to generate five novel mouse lines containing COOH-terminal truncation mutants of LepRb. We analyzed the metabolic phenotype and measures of hypothalamic function for these mouse lines.

RESULTS: We found that deletion of LepRb sequences between residues 921 and 960 dramatically worsens metabolic control and alters hypothalamic function relative to smaller truncations. We also found that deletion of the regions including residues 1013-1053 and 960-1013 each decreased obesity compared to deletions that included additional COOH-terminal residues.

CONCLUSIONS: LepRb sequences between residues 921 and 960 mediate the STAT3 and LepRb phosphorylation-independent second signal that contributes to the control of energy balance and metabolism by leptin/LepRb. In addition to confirming the inhibitory role of the region (residues 961-1013) containing Tyr, we also identified the region containing residues 1013-1053 (which contains no Tyr residues) as a second potential mediator of LepRb inhibition. Thus, the intracellular domain of LepRb mediates multiple Tyr-independent signals.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Molecular metabolism
Volume
32
Number of Pages
168-175
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
2212-8778
DOI
10.1016/j.molmet.2019.12.013
Alternate Journal
Mol Metab
PMID
32029227
PMCID
PMC6992902
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