Obesity has recently been linked with reduced fertility, and the mechanisms underpinning this effect are currently unknown. The adipokine leptin is dysregulated in obesity and affects reproductive tracts; therefore, we investigated the dose-dependent effects of leptin on Leydig cell function and spermatogenesis. Eight-week-old leptin-deficient obese (ob/ob) male mice were treated with subphysiological (0.1- or 0.5-mg/kg body weight [BW]/d) or physiological (3.0-mg/kg BW/d) doses of leptin or saline for 12 weeks (chronic treatment) or 72 hours (acute treatment). We then evaluated male reproductive function markers. Mean testis weight increased significantly in the 0.1- and 3.0-mg/kg BW/d groups compared with saline controls (both P
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Hoffmann, A., Manjowk, G. M., Wagner, I. V., Klöting, N., Ebert, T., Jessnitzer, B., … Kralisch, S. (2016). Leptin within the subphysiological to physiological range dose dependently improves male reproductive function in an obesity mouse model. Endocrinology, 157(6), 2461–2468. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2015-1966
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