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Leptin Prevents Fasting-Induced Suppression of Prothyrotropin-Releasing Hormone Messenger Ribonucleic Acid in Neurons of the Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus*
483
Citations
65
References
1997
Year
Prolonged fasting lowers circulating T3 and T4 while leaving TSH low or normal, largely because it suppresses proTRH gene expression in paraventricular nucleus neurons and reduces TRH release. The study tests whether the fasting‑induced drop in leptin resets thyroid‑feedback inhibition on proTRH synthesis, thereby modulating the hypothalamic‑pituitary‑thyroid axis. In male Sprague‑Dawley rats, 3‑day fasting reduced plasma T4/T3 and proTRH mRNA, but intraperitoneal leptin (0.5 µg g⁻¹ BW every 6 h) restored both hormone levels and PVN proTRH expression. Leptin treatment normalized thyroid hormone concentrations, reinstated PVN proTRH mRNA, increased free T4 during fasting, and had no effect on lateral hypothalamic proTRH or peripheral thyroid‑binding proteins, confirming a selective central action.
Prolonged fasting is associated with a number of changes in the thyroid axis manifested by low serum T3 and T4 levels and, paradoxically, low or normal TSH. This response is, at least partly, caused by suppression of proTRH gene expression in neurons of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and reduced hypothalamic TRH release. Because the fall in thyroid hormone levels can be blunted in mice by the systemic administration of leptin, we raised the possibility that leptin may have an important role in the neuroendocrine regulation of the thyroid axis, through effects on hypophysiotropic neurons producing proTRH. Adult male, Sprague-Dawley rats were either fed normally, fasted for 3 days, or fasted and administered leptin at a dose of 0.5 μg/gm BW ip every 6 h. Fasted animals showed significant reduction in plasma total and free T4 and T3 levels compared with controls, that were restored toward normal by the administration of leptin. Percent free T4, but not percent free T3, increased during fasting, further suggesting a reduction in plasma transthyretin levels that did not return to fed levels after leptin administration. By semiquantitative analysis of in situ hybridization autoradiograms, proTRH messenger RNA in medial parvocellular PVN neurons was markedly suppressed in the fasting animals but was restored to normal by leptin administration [fed vs. fast vs. fast/leptin (density units × 108): 8.5 ± 0.4, 3.2 ± 0.2, 8.1 ± 0.8]. In contrast, proTRH messenger RNA in adjacent neurons in the lateral hypothalamus that do not have a hypophysiotropic function remained unchanged by any of the experimental manipulations. These findings indicate that leptin has a selective, central action to modulate the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis by regulating proTRH gene expression in the PVN but does not have peripheral effects on thyroid-binding proteins. We propose that the fall in circulating leptin levels during fasting resets the set point for feedback inhibition by thyroid hormones on the biosynthesis of hypophysiotropic proTRH, thereby allowing adaptation to starvation.
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