Skip to main content

Leptin mediates postprandial increases in body temperature through hypothalamus-adrenal medulla-adipose tissue crosstalk.

Citation
Perry, R. J., et al. “Leptin Mediates Postprandial Increases In Body Temperature Through Hypothalamus-Adrenal Medulla-Adipose Tissue Crosstalk.”. The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, pp. 2001-2016.
Center Yale University
Author Rachel J Perry, Kun Lyu, Aviva Rabin-Court, Jianying Dong, Xiruo Li, Yunfan Yang, Hua Qing, Andrew Wang, Xiaoyong Yang, Gerald I Shulman
Keywords Endocrinology, leptin, Metabolism
Abstract

Meal ingestion increases body temperature in multiple species, an effect that is blunted by obesity. However, the mechanisms responsible for these phenomena remain incompletely understood. Here we show that refeeding increases plasma leptin concentrations approximately 8-fold in 48-hour-fasted lean rats, and this normalization of plasma leptin concentrations stimulates adrenomedullary catecholamine secretion. Increased adrenal medulla-derived plasma catecholamines were necessary and sufficient to increase body temperature postprandially, a process that required both fatty acids generated from adipose tissue lipolysis and β-adrenergic activation of brown adipose tissue (BAT). Diet-induced obese rats, which remained relatively hyperleptinemic while fasting, did not exhibit fasting-induced reductions in temperature. To examine the impact of feeding-induced increases in body temperature on energy balance, we compared rats fed chronically by either 2 carbohydrate-rich boluses daily or a continuous isocaloric intragastric infusion. Bolus feeding increased body temperature and reduced weight gain compared with continuous feeding, an effect abrogated by treatment with atenolol. In summary, these data demonstrate that leptin stimulates a hypothalamus-adrenal medulla-BAT axis, which is necessary and sufficient to induce lipolysis and, as a result, increase body temperature after refeeding.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
The Journal of clinical investigation
Volume
130
Issue
4
Number of Pages
2001-2016
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
1558-8238
DOI
10.1172/JCI134699
Alternate Journal
J Clin Invest
PMID
32149734
PMCID
PMC7108915
Download citation