Increased levels of mRNA transcribed from the ob gene in adipose tissue of obese/hyperinsulinaemic Zucker (fa/fa) rats were detectable as early as 3 weeks after birth and continued to rise there after in parallel with body weight and serum insulin. mRNA levels of two other fat-specific genes (ARIA, FST44) were unaltered. In C57BL/KsJ db/db mice, ob mRNA levels also increased in parallel with body weight and serum insulin, and remained elevated in older animals when insulin levels decreased. In heterozygous control animals (db/ +; fa/Fa), mRNA levels were comparable with those in the homozygous controls. In normal Sprague Dawley rats, the ob mRNA increased continuously, but more slowly than in Zucker rats, in parallel with body weight and insulin levels, and reached 15 times higher levels in the heaviest rats (400 g) studied. In Sprague Dawley rats made diabetic by an injection of streptozotocin, ob mRNA levels were reduced by approximately 50% after 24 h. A 24-h fasting period reduced the ob mRNA by 50% in lean Sprague Dawley and Fa/Fa, but not in obese Zucker fa/fa rats, although insulin levels were reduced in both groups. These data indicate that ob mRNA levels increase in both normal and obese rodents in parallel with age, body weight and serum insulin, reflecting an early (Zucker rats, db-mice) or slowly developing (Sprague Dawley rats) resistance to leptin and insulin. This increase does not appear to be mediated by the recently described rapid regulation of ob mRNA by insulin, but seems to be due to a different, long-term control mechanism which signals the size of the fat depots.
CITATION STYLE
Igel, M., Kainulainen, H., Brauers, A., Becker, W., Herberg, L., & Joost, H. G. (1996). Long-term and rapid regulation of ob mRNA levels in adipose tissue from normal (Sprague Dawley rats) and obese (db/db mice, fa/fa rats) rodents. Diabetologia, 39(7), 758–765. https://doi.org/10.1007/s001250050508
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