Leptin actions on food intake and body temperature are mediated by IL-1

GN Luheshi, JD Gardner… - Proceedings of the …, 1999 - National Acad Sciences
GN Luheshi, JD Gardner, DA Rushforth, AS Loudon, NJ Rothwell
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999National Acad Sciences
Leptin regulates energy balance through its actions in the brain on appetite and energy
expenditure and also shares properties with cytokines such as IL-1. We report here that
leptin, injected into rats intracerebroventricularly or peripherally, induces significant dose-
dependent increases in core body temperature as well as suppression of appetite. Leptin
failed to affect food intake or body temperature in obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats, which posses a
defective leptin receptor. Furthermore, injection of leptin increased levels of the …
Leptin regulates energy balance through its actions in the brain on appetite and energy expenditure and also shares properties with cytokines such as IL-1. We report here that leptin, injected into rats intracerebroventricularly or peripherally, induces significant dose-dependent increases in core body temperature as well as suppression of appetite. Leptin failed to affect food intake or body temperature in obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats, which posses a defective leptin receptor. Furthermore, injection of leptin increased levels of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-1β in the hypothalamus of normal Sprague–Dawley rats. Central injection of IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) inhibited the suppression of food intake caused by central or peripheral injection of leptin (60 and 84%, respectively) and abolished the leptin-induced increase in body temperature in both cases. Mice lacking (gene knockout) the main IL-1 receptor (80 kDa, R1) responsible for IL-1 actions showed no reduction in food intake in response to leptin. These data indicate that leptin actions in the brain depend on IL-1, and we show further that the effect of leptin on fever, but not food intake, is abolished by a cyclooxygenase inhibitor. Thus, we propose that in addition to its role in body weight regulation, leptin may mediate neuroimmune responses via actions in the brain dependent on release of IL-1 and prostaglandins.
National Acad Sciences