Abstract

To determine if the age-dependent increase of adiposity is directly related to altered obese ( ob) and fatty acid synthase ( FAS) gene expression, we assessed an adiposity index, leptin and FAS mRNA levels, FAS activity in perirenal adipose tissue and serum leptin concentration in rats aged 1, 2, 3, 6 and 20 months. The results indicate that there are two distinct phases of changes in perirenal white adipose tissue leptin mRNA level and serum leptin concentration. The first phase, between 1 and 3 months of the animals’ lives, was characterized by a strong positive correlation between adiposity index and leptin mRNA level as well as serum leptin concentration. In the second phase (over 3 months) no significant changes of leptin mRNA and serum concentration occurred. A close correlation between the age-induced increase of leptin mRNA abundance and serum leptin concentration and the age-induced suppression of FAS gene expression in the same tissue was observed. This suggests that the changes of FAS gene expression occur in response to serum leptin concentration and that in mature rats the high level of ob gene expression and consequently the high leptin concentration protect the white adipose tissue cells against fat overload by two independent mechanisms: (a) preventing an increase of food intake through the leptin action on the hypothalamus; (b) inhibiting FAS gene expression and consequently decreasing the rate of lipogenesis.

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