Resistin appears to be not the main link between obesity and insulin resistance in children and adolescents but because of its association with Tanner stage, it may be related to the maturation of children during pubertal development. Additionally, we have demonstrated the presence of different molecular isoforms of resistin in human blood, and this may raise problems in comparing data from diverse assay systems.
Leptin is bound in human blood by a high affinity binding protein, which appears to be identical with the soluble leptin receptor (sOB-R). Using a ligand-mediated immunofunctional assay for the determination of serum sOB-R, we investigated its course during childhood, puberty, and adolescence in a large cohort of 581 healthy children and adolescents and a small group of 13 patients with anorexia nervosa. In the first years of life, sOB-R is detectable in remarkably high concentrations. Thereafter, a continuous decline of sOB-R levels was found. Consequently, correlation analyses demonstrated significant inverse relationships (P < 0.001) of sOB-R with age, IGF-I levels, pubertal stage, auxological and body composition parameters, as well as with leptin concentrations. Multiple regression analysis revealed that height, IGF-I, and age (only in girls) were independent predictors of sOB-R levels; these variables account for approximately 65% and 48% of the variation of sOB-R levels in boys and girls, respectively. The courses of age-dependent median values for the free leptin index (FLI, ratio between leptin and sOB-R levels) and for leptin levels were parallel in both genders. Correlation analyses demonstrated that in particular parameters of growth and sexual maturation are more closely related to the FLI than to leptin alone; this closer relationship is more pronounced among boys. Weight gains of patients with anorexia nervosa resulted in a significant increase in leptin and IGF-I levels (P < 0.01), whereas the median of sOB-R values decreased (P < 0.01). sOB-R and IGF-I levels were again significantly correlated (r = -0.55, P < 0.01). These findings suggest that high levels of sOB-R in emaciation may reflect an up-regulation of the sOB-R to suppress leptin action during energy deficiency. Furthermore, determinations of sOB-R and FLI are additional valuable tools to investigate the leptin axis during growth and sexual maturation.
Leptin, a 167 amino acid peptide, is known to influence the gonads via direct and indirect effects. Recent studies provide contradictory proposition about the peripheral impact of leptin in the male gonads. Thus, we examined leptin and its receptors in human seminal plasma and in human ejaculated spermatozoa by Western blot technique and fluorescence microscopy. In seminal plasma we found a free leptin band (16 kDa) by an anti-leptin polyclonal antibody. Incubation of seminal plasma with recombinant leptin caused a statistically significant increase in the amount of free leptin (p < 0.01) and supports this finding. Furthermore, a soluble leptin receptor (145 kDa) was found in human seminal plasma in the same specimen. We also detected a 145-kDa leptin receptor isoform in ejaculated spermatozoa as a possible target of leptin action in the male genital tract, which was localized at the tail of spermatozoa by immunofluorescence microscopy only. This receptor was significantly associated with the intactness of sperm plasma membranes. Spermatozoa with deteriorated membranes contained 49.2 +/- 6.9% leptin receptor signal intensity compared with spermatozoa having intact membranes (p < 0.01). This finding is difficult to interpret and may be caused by a leakage of OB-R due to loss of membrane integrity. In conclusion, these data provide further hints for a peripheral role of leptin in the male genital tract, possibly, by an interaction between leptin and spermatozoa via sperm leptin receptors.
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