Abstract

The product of the obese gene, leptin, may be an important regulator of adiposity via its regulation of feed intake and energy metabolism. Probes were developed using the polymerase chain reaction to analyze gene expression and determine the structure of the porcine ob gene. Porcine ob was expressed in adipose tissue as a 3,100 bp mRNA. Finished pigs (136 kg) had higher (P<.01) levels of ob mRNA (per unit of 6‐actin mRNA) in subcutaneous adipose tissue than did growing pigs (60 kg). Obese gene expression was not detected in tissues other than adipose depots. A genomic DNA fragment containing the ob gene was isolated from a cosmid DNA library. Sequence analysis indicates that the ob gene has three exons. A short untranslated sequence was identified as exon 1 and the amino acid coding sequence was located in the second and third exons. The gene structure, intron/exon boundaries, and the amino acid sequence was highly conserved in mammalian species. The porcine leptin amino acid sequence was 95%, 92% and 89% similar to cattle, human and mouse leptin sequences, respectively.

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