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Oxford University Press, The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 3(98), p. 1235-1241, 2013

DOI: 10.1210/jc.2012-3424

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Leptin Stimulates Both Endothelin-1 and Nitric Oxide Activity in Lean Subjects But Not in Patients With Obesity-Related Metabolic Syndrome

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Context:Leptin has nitric oxide (NO)-dependent vasodilator actions, but hyperleptinemia is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease.Objective:The objective of the study was to investigate whether, in the human circulation, properties of leptin to release NO are opposed by stimulation of vasculotoxic substances, such as endothelin (ET)-1, and whether this mechanism might contribute to vascular damage in hyperleptinemic states like obesity.Methods:Forearm blood flow responses (plethysmography) to ET(A) receptor antagonism (BQ-123, 10 nmol/min) and NO synthase inhibition [N(G)-monomethyl L-arginine (L-NMMA), 4 μmol/min] were assessed before and after intraarterial administration of leptin (2 μg/min) in lean controls (n = 8) and patients with obesity-related metabolic syndrome (MetS; n = 8).Results:Baseline plasma leptin was higher in patients than in controls (P < .001). Before infusion of leptin, the vasodilator response to BQ-123 was greater in patients than in controls (P < .001), whereas infusion of L-NMMA induced higher vasoconstriction in controls than in patients (P = .04). In lean subjects, hyperleptinemia resulted in increased vasodilator response to ET(A) receptor antagonism (P < .001 vs before) and enhanced vasoconstrictor effect of L-NMMA during ET(A) receptor blockade (P = .015 vs before). In patients with the MetS, by contrast, vascular responses to both BQ-123 and L-NMMA were not modified by exogenous leptin (both P > .05 vs before).Conclusions:These findings indicate that, under physiological conditions, leptin stimulates both ET-1 and NO activity in the human circulation. This effect is absent in hyperleptinemic patients with the MetS who are unresponsive to additional leptin. In these patients, therefore, hyperleptinemia may be a biomarker of vascular dysfunction, rather than a mediator of vascular damage.