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The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 88, No. 10 4874-4883
Copyright © 2003 by The Endocrine Society

Leptin Administration Increases Nocturnal Concentrations of Luteinizing Hormone and Growth Hormone in Juvenile Female Rhesus Monkeys

Mark E. Wilson, Jeffrey Fisher, Kathy Chikazawa, Ruth Yoda, Ariadne Legendre, Deborah Mook and Kenneth G. Gould

Division of Psychobiology (M.E.W., J.F., K.C., R.Y., A.L., K.G.G.), Yerkes National Primate Research Center; and Division of Animal Resources (D.M.), Emory University, Atlanta Georgia 30329

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Mark E. Wilson, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, 954 Gatewood Road, Atlanta, Georgia 30329. E-mail: markw{at}rmy.emory.edu.

The importance of leptin in regulating sexual maturation is supported by data showing that deletions of the leptin gene or alterations in the leptin receptor result in infertility. However, attempts to define a role for leptin in normal puberty have produced equivocal results, leading to the conclusion that, if leptin is involved in puberty, its role is permissive and not obligatory. To better define the importance of leptin in primate puberty, the present study tested the hypothesis that a premature elevation in nocturnal leptin concentrations would accelerate indices of puberty, including nocturnal LH secretion in female rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Juvenile, gonadally intact females were treated daily with leptin (n = 6; 30 µg/kg, sc at 1700 h) from 12–30 months of age and were compared with age-matched control females (n = 13). Chronic elevation in peripheral concentrations of leptin increased serum levels of both daytime and nighttime bioactive LH at a significantly younger age compared with control females. The earlier rise in LH in leptin-treated females was associated with an earlier increase in serum estradiol and occurrence of menarche. Despite this effect of leptin, nocturnal serum LH was significantly higher at each age assessed in non-leptin-treated ovariectomized controls (n = 6). In addition, leptin increased skeletal lengths and maturity that were associated with significantly higher serum levels of nocturnal GH and daytime IGF-I. Although body weights were not consistently affected by treatment, body mass index, as an index of body fat, was consistently lower in leptin-treated females. Taken together, these data indicate that the chronic elevation in serum leptin concentrations advances the nocturnal increase in serum LH as well as other parameters of female puberty. Furthermore, the observation that nocturnal LH was higher in age-matched, agonadal females compared with the leptin-treated females suggests that the nongonadal drive to LH secretion is operative in female macaques as early as 14 months of age, suggesting that the effect of leptin on puberty in female primates may involve a diminution in gonadal negative feedback suppression of LH secretion. Such a role would suggest that leptin is permissive yet critical for advancing female puberty.

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HD37583, HD39153, and RR00165. The Yerkes National Primate Research Center is fully accredited by the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care.

Abbreviations: bioLH, Bioactive LH; BMI, body mass index; Con, control group; CV, coefficient(s) of variation; icv, intracerebroventricular(ly); Ob, leptin-treated group; Ovx-Con, ovariectomized controls.




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