Abstract
The postnatal leptin surge, described particularly in rodent, has been demonstrated to be crucial for hypothalamic maturation and brain development.the present study, the possible general effects of this hormone on maturation of numerous peripheral organs have been explored. To test this hypothesis, we used a leptin antagonist (L39A/D40A/F41A) to investigate the effects of the blockage of postnatal leptin action on neonatal growth and maturation of organs involved in metabolism regulation, reproduction and immunity. For that purpose, newborn female pups were subcutaneously injected from days 2-13 with either saline or leptin antagonist and sacrificed at weaning. Organs were submitted to histological and immunohistochemical analyses. Leptin antagonist treatment clearly impaired the maturation of pancreas, kidney, thymus and ovary. All these alterations, at the organ level, occurred without changes in the whole body mass of the animals. Leptin antagonist treatment induced: (1) a reduction in beta cell area and a concomitant increase of alpha cells in Langherans islets in pancreas, (2) a reduction in the number of glomeruli and a persistence of immature glomeruli in kidney, (3) an increase in the thymic cortical layer thickness reflecting an unmatured stage, (4) a drastic reduction of the pool of primordial follicles, in ovaries. All these results strongly argue for a crucial role of leptin for the achievement of organ maturation, opening new perspectives in the field of leptin physiology and organ development. © 2011 Landes Bioscience.
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Attig, L., Larcher, T., Gertler, A., Abdennebi-Najar, L., & Djiane, J. (2011). Postnatal leptin is necessary for maturation of numerous organs in newborn rats. Organogenesis, 7(2), 88–94. https://doi.org/10.4161/org.7.2.14871
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