Abstract

Obese Zucker rats (fa/fa) are characterized by inadequate leptin signaling caused by a mutation in the leptin receptor gene. Obese Zucker females are infertile and hyporesponsive to the inductive effects of ovarian hormones on sexual behaviors. Leptin treatment reverses aspects of reproductive dysfunction due to perturbations in energy balance in other animal models. Our first experiment tested the hypothesis that intracerebroventricular (icv) leptin administration would enhance the display of sexual behaviors in obese Zucker females. A second experiment compared lean and obese Zucker females' responses to leptin, during fed and fasted conditions. Ovariectomized (OVX) Zucker rats were implanted with lateral ventricular cannulae. In Experiment 1, fasted, obese females received estradiol benzoate, progesterone, and icv injections of 3, 18, or 36 μg murine leptin or vehicle. Leptin administration reduced food intake, but did not enhance sexual behaviors. In Experiment 2, steroid-replaced, OVX lean and obese females (from a different source than those in Experiment 1) received icv injections of vehicle or 3 or 36 μg leptin under fed and fasted conditions. Leptin treatment reduced food intake and weight gain in the fed, but not the fasted, condition in both genotypes. Sexual receptivity and locomotion were not affected, but icv leptin injections reduced proceptive behaviors in ad libitum-fed rats. These data confirm previous reports that centrally administered leptin decreases food intake and weight gain in obese Zucker rats; results from Experiment 2 suggest that lean and obese females are similarly responsive to these actions of leptin. Contrary to our hypothesis, leptin treatment did not stimulate sexual behaviors; rather, the hormone appears to inhibit the display of sexual proceptivity in ad libitum-fed lean and obese Zucker female rats.

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