Abstract

At present, leptin is quantitated using immuno-assays that measure leptin mass. Leptin biological activity is determined using protocols that measure feed consumption and weight reduction. These in vivo protocols are semi-quantitative and require large quantities of leptin. We describe a rapid, sensitive and quantitative in vitro assay for leptin using HEK-293 cells stably co-transfected with the leptin receptor Ob-Rb isoform and a STAT-inducible promoter regulating the firefly luciferase cDNA. The assay, performed in a 96-well format, has an EC 50 of 150 pM and is linear from 3 to 700 pM of leptin. We demonstrate that the assay is capable of measuring leptin in plasma samples. We demonstrate that bacterially-expressed, recombinant leptin and in vivo expressed leptin are equipotent. Furthermore, we demonstrate that a leptin-derived peptide, leptin fragment 22–56, previously shown to be capable of reducing feed intake following ICV injection does not act directly through the leptin receptor.

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