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Effects of Leptin and Melanocortin Signaling Interactions on Pubertal Development and Reproduction
Author(s) -
Davelene D. Israel,
Sharone Sheffer-Babila,
Carl de Luca,
YoungHwan Jo,
Shun Mei Liu,
Xia Qiu,
Daniel J. Spergel,
Siok L. Dun,
Nae J. Dun,
Streamson C. Chua
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.674
H-Index - 257
eISSN - 1945-7170
pISSN - 0013-7227
DOI - 10.1210/en.2011-1822
Subject(s) - melanocortin , melanocortin receptor , medicine , endocrinology , leptin , biology , melanocortin 4 receptor , leptin receptor , neuropeptide , melanocortin 3 receptor , receptor , agonist , neuropeptide y receptor , hormone , obesity
Leptin and melanocortin signaling control ingestive behavior, energy balance, and substrate utilization, but only leptin signaling defects cause hypothalamic hypogonadism and infertility. Although GnRH neurons do not express leptin receptors, leptin influences GnRH neuron activity via regulation of immediate downstream mediators including the neuropeptides neuropeptide Y and the melanocortin agonist and antagonist, α-MSH, agouti-related peptide, respectively. Here we show that modulation of melanocortin signaling in female db/db mice through ablation of agouti-related peptide, or heterozygosity of melanocortin 4 receptor, restores the timing of pubertal onset, fertility, and lactation. Additionally, melanocortin 4 receptor activation increases action potential firing and induces c-Fos expression in GnRH neurons, providing further evidence that melanocortin signaling influences GnRH neuron activity. These studies thus establish melanocortin signaling as an important component in the leptin-mediated regulation of GnRH neuron activity, initiation of puberty and fertility.

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