Kiess W, Anil M, Blum W F, Englaro P, Juul A, Attanasio A, Dötsch J, Rascher W
Children's Hospital, Justus Liebig University, Giessen, Germany.
Eur J Endocrinol. 1998 May;138(5):501-9. doi: 10.1530/eje.0.1380501.
The ob protein, termed leptin, is produced by adipocytes and is thought to act as an afferent satiety signal regulating weight through suppressing appetite and stimulating energy expenditure in humans and/or rodents. Insulin has been found to be a potent stimulator of leptin expression in rodents. It is unclear at present whether this insulin action is a direct or an indirect effect. To investigate whether leptin concentrations in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes (IDDM) were related to metabolic status, body weight, body mass index and insulin treatment, we have measured leptin concentrations in serum from 13 newly diagnosed IDDM patients before the beginning of insulin treatment (8 girls, 5 boys, aged 4.7-17.5 years) and in 134 patients with IDDM during treatment (64 girls, 70 boys, aged 2.6-20.1 years) using a specific radioimmunoassay. The data from patients with diabetes were compared with normative data that were derived from a large cohort of healthy children and adolescents. Serum from children with newly diagnosed diabetes had significantly lower levels of leptin (mean 1.28+/-1.60 ng/ml, range 0.14-6.13 ng/ml) compared with healthy children (n=710) (mean 2.2 ng/ml, range 0.26-14.4ng/ml) and compared with insulin-treated children and adolescents (mean 5.18+/-5.48 ng/ml, range 0.26-29.77 ng/ml) (P<0.0001) even after adjustment for gender and body mass index (BMI). Serum leptin levels in patients with IDDM were significantly correlated with BMI (r=0.42, P<0.0001). Multiple regression analysis showed that age and BMI were significantly correlated with leptin levels, while duration of diabetes, mean HbA1c levels, insulin dose and plasma glucose, triglyceride and cholesterol levels were not. Females had higher serum leptin concentrations than males even when adjusted for BMI (P<0.0001). Surprisingly and most importantly, leptin levels in insulin-treated young adult (Tanner stage 5) patients were significantly higher than values found in the healthy nondiabetic reference population when adjusted for sex, Tanner stage and BMI. These findings suggest that leptin levels in IDDM patients show a similar dependency on adipose tissue and age as in healthy, normal children. The data provide evidence that insulin may be of importance as a regulator of serum leptin levels in vivo not only in rodents but also in humans. It is hypothesized that the elevated BMI-adjusted leptin levels in adolescents with IDDM could indicate either that these patients may be oversubstituted by the intensified insulin therapy that they are receiving or that their body composition and body fat content may differ from that of healthy adolescents in the sense that they have a relative increase in fat mass.
肥胖蛋白(ob蛋白),即瘦素,由脂肪细胞产生,被认为是一种传入性饱腹感信号,通过抑制食欲和刺激人类和/或啮齿动物的能量消耗来调节体重。胰岛素已被发现是啮齿动物中瘦素表达的有效刺激物。目前尚不清楚这种胰岛素作用是直接效应还是间接效应。为了研究1型糖尿病(IDDM)儿童和青少年的瘦素浓度是否与代谢状态、体重、体重指数及胰岛素治疗有关,我们采用特异性放射免疫分析法,测量了13例新诊断的IDDM患者在开始胰岛素治疗前(8名女孩,5名男孩,年龄4.7 - 17.5岁)以及134例IDDM治疗期间患者(64名女孩,70名男孩,年龄2.6 - 20.1岁)血清中的瘦素浓度。将糖尿病患者的数据与来自一大群健康儿童和青少年的标准数据进行比较。新诊断糖尿病儿童的血清瘦素水平(平均1.28±1.60 ng/ml,范围0.14 - 6.13 ng/ml)与健康儿童(n = 710)(平均2.2 ng/ml,范围0.26 - 14.4 ng/ml)以及胰岛素治疗的儿童和青少年(平均5.18±5.48 ng/ml,范围0.26 - 29.77 ng/ml)相比,即使在对性别和体重指数(BMI)进行校正后仍显著较低(P<0.0001)。IDDM患者的血清瘦素水平与BMI显著相关(r = 0.42,P<0.0001)。多元回归分析表明,年龄和BMI与瘦素水平显著相关,而糖尿病病程、平均糖化血红蛋白水平、胰岛素剂量以及血浆葡萄糖、甘油三酯和胆固醇水平则无相关性。即使对BMI进行校正后,女性的血清瘦素浓度仍高于男性(P<0.0001)。令人惊讶且最重要的是,在对性别、坦纳分期和BMI进行校正后,胰岛素治疗的年轻成人(坦纳5期)患者的瘦素水平显著高于健康非糖尿病参考人群中的水平。这些发现表明,IDDM患者的瘦素水平与健康正常儿童一样,对脂肪组织和年龄具有相似的依赖性。数据提供了证据,表明胰岛素不仅在啮齿动物中,而且在人类体内作为血清瘦素水平的调节剂可能具有重要作用。据推测,IDDM青少年中经BMI校正后升高的瘦素水平可能表明,这些患者可能因接受强化胰岛素治疗而用药过量,或者他们的身体组成和体脂含量可能与健康青少年不同,即他们的脂肪量相对增加。