| Literature DB >> 29261744 |
Alicja A Skowronski1,2, Yann Ravussin2, Rudolph L Leibel1,3,4, Charles A LeDuc3,4.
Abstract
Maintenance of reduced body weight is associated both with reduced energy expenditure per unit metabolic mass and increased hunger in mice and humans. Lowered circulating leptin concentration, due to decreased fat mass, provides a primary signal for this response. However, leptin deficient (Lepob/ob) mice (and leptin receptor deficient Zucker rats) reduce energy expenditure following weight reduction by a necessarily non-leptin dependent mechanisms. To identify these mechanisms, Lepob/ob mice were fed ad libitum (AL group; n = 21) or restricted to 3 kilocalories of chow per day (CR group, n = 21). After losing 20% of initial weight (in approximately 2 weeks), the CR mice were stabilized at 80% of initial body weight for two weeks by titrated refeeding, and then released from food restriction. CR mice conserved energy (-17% below predicted based on body mass and composition during the day; -52% at night); and, when released to ad libitum feeding, CR mice regained fat and lean mass (to AL levels) within 5 weeks. CR mice did so while their ad libitum caloric intake was equal to that of the AL animals. While calorically restricted, the CR mice had a significantly lower respiratory exchange ratio (RER = 0.89) compared to AL (0.94); after release to ad libitum feeding, RER was significantly higher (1.03) than in the AL group (0.93), consistent with their anabolic state. These results confirm that, in congenitally leptin deficient animals, leptin is not required for compensatory reduction in energy expenditure accompanying weight loss, but suggest that the hyperphagia of the weight-reduced state is leptin-dependent.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29261744 PMCID: PMC5738099 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 6Energy expenditure and activity of AL and CR mice.
(A) Energy expenditure during calorie restriction in mice fed ad libitum chow throughout the study (AL) and mice calorically restricted to 80% of initial body weight (CR). Energy expenditure during calorie restriction was measured in the TSE metabolic chambers. Included are the following: TEE–total energy expenditure, REE–resting energy expenditure, NREE–non resting energy expenditure and torpor suppression. (B) Physical activity in AL and CR mice during CR and after release to ad libitum feeding. Activity was measured in the TSE system. Regression of instantaneous TEE as a function of movement (C) during the day and (D) at night in mice fed ad libitum chow throughout the study (AL), mice calorically restricted to 80% of initial body weight (CR) and the CR group after release to ad libitum feeding. P values: *<0.05, ***<0.001.
Fig 4Food intake, plasma glucose and insulin in CR and AL mice.
(A) Mean 24h food intake ±SEM (g) and (B) Cumulative food intake over 8 weeks of body weight re-gain in mice fed ad libitum chow throughout the study (AL) and mice calorically restricted to 80% of initial body weight then released to ad libitum feeding. (C) Mean glucose and (D) insulin ±SEM in ad libitum fed (AL) or calorically restricted (CR) mice measured at 12 weeks of age while CR mice were calorically restricted to maintain 80% of initial body weight. (E) Regression of circulating insulin concentrations against fat mass in the AL and CR groups of mice at 11 weeks of age while CR were weight stable at the reduced body weight. P values: ***<0.001.
Fig 8Correlations of energy expenditure with body composition in AL and CR mice.
Regression of (A, C) lean mass and (B, D) fat mass against (A, B) total and (C, D) resting energy expenditure in the AL and CR groups of mice during the weight maintenance segment of the CR phase.
Body weight, body composition, and food intake of AL and CR mice.
| Baseline (8 wks old) | During CR (10 wks old) | BW regained (18–18.5 wks old) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AL | CR | Pval | AL | CR | Pval | AL | CR | Pval | |
| Body wt (g) | 42.19±0.60 | 43.30±0.54 | 0.19 | 46.73±0.80 | 34.75±0.43 | 60.18±0.95 | 57.55±0.91 | 0.06 | |
| Fat mass (g) | 18.54±0.40 | 19.50±0.30 | 0.07 | 22.03±0.48 | 15.37±0.23 | 29.52±1.04 | 27.87±0.47 | 0.12 | |
| Lean mass (g) | 19.69±0.27 | 20.03±0.22 | 0.35 | 20.87±0.24 | 15.37±0.32 | 26.13±1.19 | 26.16±0.32 | 0.98 | |
| Food intake (g) | 7.30±0.18 | 7.51±0.36 | 0.61 | 6.58±0.27 | 1.40±0.08 | 5.45±0.29 | 5.26±0.15 | 0.61 | |
Mean body weight, fat mass, lean mass and food intake with SEM at baseline (8 weeks of age), during calorie restriction (10 weeks of age) and after CR group re-gained body weight (18.5 weeks of age; fat mass, lean mass and food intake measured at 18 weeks of age) in mice fed ad libitum throughout the study (AL) and mice calorically restricted to 80% of initial body weight then released to ad libitum feeding (CR).