Literature DB >> 10902802

Effect of puberty on the relationship between circulating leptin and body composition.

M B Horlick1, M Rosenbaum, M Nicolson, L S Levine, B Fedun, J Wang, R N Pierson, R L Leibel.   

Abstract

Circulating concentrations of leptin are better correlated with absolute amounts of adipose tissue [fat mass (FM)] than with relative body fatness (body mass index or percent body fat). There is a clear sexual dimorphism in circulating concentrations of leptin (females > males) at birth and in adulthood. However, whether such dimorphism is present in the interval between these periods of development remains controversial. We examined body composition and clinical (Tanner stage) and endocrine (pituitary-gonadal axis hormones) aspects of sexual maturation in relationship to circulating concentrations of leptin in 102 children (53 males and 49 females, 6-19 yr of age) to evaluate the relationship between circulating leptin concentrations and body composition before and during puberty. Pubertal stage was assigned by physical examination (Tanner staging) and also assessed by measurement of plasma estradiol, testosterone, and pituitary gonadotropins. Body composition was determined by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry and by anthropometry. Circulating concentrations of leptin in the postabsorptive state were determined by a solid-phase sandwich enzyme immunoassay. The effect of gender on the relationship between circulating leptin concentrations and FM was determined by ANOVA at each Tanner stage. Stepwise multiple linear regression analyses, including circulating concentrations of pituitary-gonadal axis hormones, and FM were performed, by gender, to determine whether the relationship between circulating concentrations of leptin and FM changes during puberty. Plasma leptin concentrations were significantly correlated with FM at all Tanner stages in males and females. Plasma leptin concentrations, normalized to FM, were significantly higher in females than males at Tanner stages IV and V but not at earlier stages of pubertal development. Plasma leptin concentrations, normalized to FM, were significantly greater in females at Tanner stage V compared with females at Tanner stage I and significantly lower in males at Tanner stage IV and V compared with males at Tanner stage I. These significant gender and maturational differences were confirmed by demonstrating that the regression equation relating circulating leptin concentrations to FM in females and males at Tanner stages IV and V were significantly different (predicted lower leptin concentrations in males than females with identical body composition) and that the regression equations relating circulating concentrations of leptin to FM in each gender before puberty (Tanner stage I) were significantly different (predicted higher plasma concentrations of leptin in prepubertal males and lower leptin concentrations in prepubertal females) than the same regression equations in later puberty. Circulating concentrations of testosterone were significant negative correlates of circulating concentrations of leptin normalized to FM in males when considered as a group over all pubertal stages. The inclusion in multivariate regression analyses of circulating concentrations of testosterone and estradiol, FM, fat-free mass, and gender did not eliminate a significant gender-effect (P < 0.05) on circulating concentrations of leptin at Tanner stages IV and V. The circulating concentration of leptin, normalized to FM, declines significantly in males and rises significantly in females late in puberty to produce a late-pubertal/adult sexual dimorphism. These studies confirm a potent role for gonadal steroids as mediators of this sexual dimorphism in circulating concentrations of leptin. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10902802     DOI: 10.1210/jcem.85.7.6689

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0021-972X            Impact factor:   5.958


  36 in total

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5.  Body weight impact on puberty: effects of high-calorie diet on puberty onset in female rhesus monkeys.

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6.  Association of plasma leptin concentrations with adiposity measurements in rural Chinese adolescents.

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Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2009-07-07       Impact factor: 5.958

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8.  Early pubertal development and insulin sensitivity among school-aged girls: mediation via adiposity.

Authors:  Jennifer B Hillman; Bin Huang; Susan M Pinney; Frank M Biro
Journal:  J Pediatr Adolesc Gynecol       Date:  2012-11-15       Impact factor: 1.814

9.  Combined association of maternal and paternal family history of diabetes with plasma leptin and adiponectin in overweight Hispanic children.

Authors:  C Koebnick; L A Kelly; C J Lane; C K Roberts; G Q Shaibi; C M Toledo-Corral; J N Davis; M J Weigensberg; M I Goran
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10.  Macronutrient intakes and cardio metabolic risk factors in high BMI African American children.

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Journal:  Nutr Metab (Lond)       Date:  2009-10-13       Impact factor: 4.169

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