Abstract

This study was performed to test the hypothesis that the kidneys play a primary role in the clearance of endogenous leptin from the circulation of obese rats. Zucker (fa/fa) obese rats were anaesthetized and subjected to various surgical manipulations of the kidneys. One hour after surgery arterial blood samples were taken at 1 h intervals for times upto 8 h. Plasma leptin concentrations were determined by radioimmunoassay. Bilateral nephrectomy induced a rapid increase in plasma leptin concentrations above control values. In contrast, continuous intravenous re-injection of voided urine did not increase circulating leptin concentrations, indicating that leptin is not present in the urine in large quantities. This conclusion was confirmed by the very low levels of detectable leptin in urine. Leptin is not metabolized across the renal circulation and is extracted intact by the kidney. Simultaneous measurement of renal plasma flow established renal leptin extraction at approximately 59 ng/ min for both kidneys. Following intravenous infusion of leptin, renal clearance and whole body clearance were equal. This finding indicates that the kidneys alone are responsible for the systemic elimination of leptin in Zucker rats. Seven hours after bilateral ureteral ligation, a procedure which lowers glomerular filtration, plasma leptin concentrations were elevated. The renal extraction of leptin did not change over a wide range of plasma leptin concentrations suggesting that renal leptin extraction is a high capacity, non-saturable process most probably glomerular filtration. Endogenous leptin is rapidly cleared from the circulation by the kidney by glomerular filtration followed by metabolic degradation in the renal tubules.

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