Plasma leptin concentrations during extended fasting and graded glucose infusions: relationships with changes in glucose, insulin, and FFA. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2001 Oct;86(10):4895-900
Date
10/16/2001Pubmed ID
11600559DOI
10.1210/jcem.86.10.7951Scopus ID
2-s2.0-0034750119 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 35 CitationsAbstract
Despite numerous studies, the in vivo regulation of plasma leptin levels in response to nutritional factors continues to remain unclear. We investigated temporal and dose-response relationships of plasma leptin in response to physiological changes in insulin/glucose. After an overnight fast of 10 h, lean, healthy subjects were investigated for an additional 16 h of either extended fasting or one of three levels of glycemia/insulinemia induced by stepwise increasing iv glucose infusions. During extended fasting, plasma leptin values declined steadily and significantly. Plasma leptin levels remained constant at glucose concentrations between 5.8-6.5 mmol/liter, which maintained normoinsulinemia at 41.5-45.4 pmol/liter and FFA at 106-123 mg/liter, but leptin concentrations were increased at higher rates of glucose infusion (with plasma glucose rising to 8.7 mmol/liter). Concentrations of serum leptin were inversely related to FFA levels during extended fasting and at all levels of glycemia. Our data indicate that in lean healthy subjects, physiological changes in glycemia and insulinemia significantly alter plasma FFA and leptin concentrations. The increases in leptin concentrations demonstrate dose-dependent relationships that appear to relate to changes in FFA levels as well as to changes in glycemia/insulinemia.
Author List
Sonnenberg GE, Krakower GR, Hoffmann RG, Maas DL, Hennes MM, Kissebah AHMESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
AdultBlood Glucose
Fasting
Fatty Acids, Nonesterified
Female
Glucose
Humans
Insulin
Leptin
Male
Middle Aged