Dhillon H, Kalra S P, Prima V, Zolotukhin S, Scarpace P J, Moldawer L L, Muzyczka N, Kalra P S
Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, Box 100274, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610-0274, USA.
Regul Pept. 2001 Jun 15;99(2-3):69-77. doi: 10.1016/s0167-0115(01)00237-3.
The weight-reducing effects of leptin are predominantly mediated through the hypothalamus in the brain. Gene therapy strategies designed for weight control have so far tested the short-term effect of peripherally delivered viral vectors encoding the leptin gene. In order to circumvent the multiple peripheral effects of hyperleptinemia and to overcome the age-related development of leptin resistance due to multiple factors, including defective leptin transport across the blood brain barrier, we determined whether delivery of viral vectors directly into the brain is a viable therapeutic strategy for long-term weight control in normal wild-type rats. A recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vector encoding rat leptin (Ob) cDNA was generated (rAAV-betaOb). When administered once intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.), rAAV-betaOb suppressed the normal time-related weight gain for extended periods of time in adult Sprague-Dawley rats. The vector expression was confirmed by immunocytochemical localization of GFP and RT-PCR analysis of leptin in the hypothalamus. This sustained restraint on weight gain was not due to shifts in caloric consumption because food-intake was similar in rAAV-betaOb-treated and rAAV-GFP-treated control rats throughout the experiment. Weight gain suppression, first apparent after 2 weeks, was a result of reduced white fat depots and was accompanied by drastically reduced serum leptin and insulin concentrations in conjunction with normoglycemia. Additionally, there was a marked increase in uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1) mRNA expression in brown adipose tissue, thereby indicating increased energy expenditure through thermogenesis. Seemingly, a selective enhancement in energy expenditure following central delivery of the leptin gene is a viable therapeutic strategy to control the age-related weight gain and provide protection from the accompanying multiple peripheral effects of hyperleptinemia and hyperinsulinemia.
瘦素的减肥作用主要通过大脑中的下丘脑介导。迄今为止,为控制体重而设计的基因治疗策略已测试了外周递送编码瘦素基因的病毒载体的短期效果。为了规避高瘦素血症的多种外周效应,并克服由于多种因素(包括瘦素跨血脑屏障转运缺陷)导致的与年龄相关的瘦素抵抗发展,我们确定将病毒载体直接递送至大脑是否是正常野生型大鼠长期控制体重的可行治疗策略。构建了一种编码大鼠瘦素(Ob)cDNA的重组腺相关病毒(rAAV)载体(rAAV-βOb)。当成年Sprague-Dawley大鼠经脑室注射(i.c.v.)一次rAAV-βOb后,其体重在较长时间内的正常随时间增加受到抑制。通过绿色荧光蛋白(GFP)的免疫细胞化学定位和下丘脑瘦素的逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)分析证实了载体表达。体重增加的持续抑制并非由于热量消耗的改变,因为在整个实验过程中,rAAV-βOb处理组和rAAV-GFP处理的对照组大鼠的食物摄入量相似。体重增加抑制在2周后首次显现,是白色脂肪储存减少的结果,并伴有血清瘦素和胰岛素浓度大幅降低以及血糖正常。此外,棕色脂肪组织中解偶联蛋白-1(UCP1)mRNA表达显著增加,从而表明通过产热增加了能量消耗。显然,在中枢递送瘦素基因后选择性增强能量消耗是控制与年龄相关的体重增加并预防高瘦素血症和高胰岛素血症伴随的多种外周效应的可行治疗策略。