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The anorexigenic effects of metformin involve increases in hypothalamic leptin receptor expression

Grégory Auberta, Virginie Mansuya, Marie-Jeanne Voirola, Luc Pellerinb, François P. PralongaCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 8 October 2009; accepted 8 February 2010. published online 19 March 2010.
Corrected Proof

Abstract 

Metformin demonstrates anorectic effects in vivo and inhibits neuropeptide Y expression in cultured hypothalamic neurons. Here we investigated the mechanisms implicated in the modulation of feeding by metformin in animals rendered obese by long-term high-fat diet (diet-induced obesity [DIO]) and in animals resistant to obesity (diet resistant [DR]). Male Long-Evans rats were kept on normal chow feeding (controls) or on high-fat diet (DIO, DR) for 6 months. Afterward, rats were treated 14 days with metformin (75 mg/kg) or isotonic sodium chloride solution and killed. Energy efficiency, metabolic parameters, and gene expression were analyzed at the end of the high-fat diet period and after 14 days of metformin treatment. At the end of the high-fat diet period, despite higher leptin levels, DIO rats had higher levels of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y expression than DR or control rats, suggesting a central leptin resistance. In DIO but also in DR rats, metformin treatment induced significant reductions of food intake accompanied by decreases in body weight. Interestingly, the weight loss achieved by metformin was correlated with pretreatment plasma leptin levels. This effect was paralleled by a stimulation of the expression of the leptin receptor gene (ObRb) in the arcuate nucleus. These data identify the hypothalamic ObRb as a gene modulated after metformin treatment and suggest that the anorectic effects of the drug are potentially mediated via an increase in the central sensitivity to leptin. Thus, they provide a rationale for novel therapeutic approaches associating leptin and metformin in the treatment of obesity.

a Service of Endocrinology, Diabetology and Metabolism and Lausanne Center for Metabolic and Cardiovascular Diseases, University Hospital and Faculty of Biology and Medicine, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland

b Department of Physiology, University Hospital and Faculty of Biology and Medicine, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +41 21 314 0596; fax: +41 21 314 0597.

PII: S0026-0495(10)00061-2

doi:10.1016/j.metabol.2010.02.007

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