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Plasma concentrations of alpha-MSH, AgRP and leptin in lean and obese men and their relationship to differing states of energy balance perturbation

Plasma concentrations of alpha-MSH, AgRP and leptin in lean and obese men and their relationship to differing states of energy balance perturbation
Plasma concentrations of alpha-MSH, AgRP and leptin in lean and obese men and their relationship to differing states of energy balance perturbation
Objective: A great deal of attention has focused on the central role of alpha melanocyte-stimulating hormone (?-MSH) and its antagonism at the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) by agouti related protein (AgRP) in the regulation of energy balance. However, very little is known regarding the function of circulating AgRP and ?-MSH in humans. We aimed to determine whether circulating ?-MSH and AgRP are responsive to long-term perturbations in energy balance, in a manner consistent with their central putative functions.
Design and Measurements: Circulating ?-MSH, AgRP and leptin were measured in both lean (n = 11) and obese (n = 18) male volunteers, some of whom (lean n = 11, obese n = 12) were then allocated one of two weight-loss dietary strategies to achieve about 5% weight loss. This was achieved by either total starvation (for 4–6 days) for rapid weight loss or a very low calorie diet (VLCD, 2·6 MJ/day) (11–12 days) for less rapid weight loss, in both the lean and obese volunteers.
Results: At baseline, prior to any weight loss both plasma ?-MSH (15·8 ± 1·2 vs. 5·8 ± 1·0 pmol/l ± SEM; P < 0·001) and AgRP (49·4 ± 2·4 vs. 10·1 ± 0·9 pg/ml ± SEM; P < 0·001) were elevated in obese subjects compared with lean. In both cases this correlated closely with fat mass (P < 0·001), percentage body fat (P < 0·001) and leptin (P < 0·05). Plasma AgRP increased significantly during a 6-day fast in lean individuals (11·1 ± 1·6 vs. 21·6 ± 3·1 pg/ml ± SEM; P < 0·05) but not in the VLCD subjects or in the obese, while ?-MSH was not affected by any changes in energy balance in either the lean or the obese volunteers.
Conclusion: We show a difference in ?-MSH and AgRP in lean and obese subjects that correlates closely with body fat at baseline. We demonstrate an increase in plasma AgRP during a 6-day fast in lean individuals that is coincident with a decrease in plasma leptin. This increase in AgRP was not due to weight loss per se as there was no change in AgRP as a result of the same weight loss in the VLCD intervention in lean individuals. The source of the increase in plasma AgRP and its physiological function in the periphery remains to be elucidated but we suggest that the dynamics of the change in plasma leptin may determine the elevation in fasting plasma AgRP in lean subjects.
31-39
Hoggard, N.
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Johnstone, A.M.
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Faber, P.
9ece510d-6c18-4aaa-8241-fe9990c0f934
Gibney, E.R.
4652759e-95a6-4ad5-9b7d-aa0802b7910f
Elia, M.
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Lobley, G.
982aa386-5ce0-450d-b33f-d51baa041f8b
Rayner, V.
e4a85dfa-0ca9-49b0-ac21-995a2746a024
Horgan, G.
4fd13009-291f-4337-bf5b-31f2384deeaa
Hunter, L.
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Bashir, S.
5537a187-06a8-4abe-8687-34dea7d0db99
Stubbs, R.J.
c7c92360-da93-41e2-86d3-4f4c164aedc9
Hoggard, N.
2689d783-4880-455c-b38b-b0b66b18ca10
Johnstone, A.M.
14a4654c-4dbb-4634-a882-881f6b069cd0
Faber, P.
9ece510d-6c18-4aaa-8241-fe9990c0f934
Gibney, E.R.
4652759e-95a6-4ad5-9b7d-aa0802b7910f
Elia, M.
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Lobley, G.
982aa386-5ce0-450d-b33f-d51baa041f8b
Rayner, V.
e4a85dfa-0ca9-49b0-ac21-995a2746a024
Horgan, G.
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Hunter, L.
0050a4ab-af04-4309-aa33-59cdc3b205ac
Bashir, S.
5537a187-06a8-4abe-8687-34dea7d0db99
Stubbs, R.J.
c7c92360-da93-41e2-86d3-4f4c164aedc9

Hoggard, N., Johnstone, A.M., Faber, P., Gibney, E.R., Elia, M., Lobley, G., Rayner, V., Horgan, G., Hunter, L., Bashir, S. and Stubbs, R.J. (2004) Plasma concentrations of alpha-MSH, AgRP and leptin in lean and obese men and their relationship to differing states of energy balance perturbation. Clinical Endocrinology, 61 (1), 31-39. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2265.2004.02056.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: A great deal of attention has focused on the central role of alpha melanocyte-stimulating hormone (?-MSH) and its antagonism at the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) by agouti related protein (AgRP) in the regulation of energy balance. However, very little is known regarding the function of circulating AgRP and ?-MSH in humans. We aimed to determine whether circulating ?-MSH and AgRP are responsive to long-term perturbations in energy balance, in a manner consistent with their central putative functions.
Design and Measurements: Circulating ?-MSH, AgRP and leptin were measured in both lean (n = 11) and obese (n = 18) male volunteers, some of whom (lean n = 11, obese n = 12) were then allocated one of two weight-loss dietary strategies to achieve about 5% weight loss. This was achieved by either total starvation (for 4–6 days) for rapid weight loss or a very low calorie diet (VLCD, 2·6 MJ/day) (11–12 days) for less rapid weight loss, in both the lean and obese volunteers.
Results: At baseline, prior to any weight loss both plasma ?-MSH (15·8 ± 1·2 vs. 5·8 ± 1·0 pmol/l ± SEM; P < 0·001) and AgRP (49·4 ± 2·4 vs. 10·1 ± 0·9 pg/ml ± SEM; P < 0·001) were elevated in obese subjects compared with lean. In both cases this correlated closely with fat mass (P < 0·001), percentage body fat (P < 0·001) and leptin (P < 0·05). Plasma AgRP increased significantly during a 6-day fast in lean individuals (11·1 ± 1·6 vs. 21·6 ± 3·1 pg/ml ± SEM; P < 0·05) but not in the VLCD subjects or in the obese, while ?-MSH was not affected by any changes in energy balance in either the lean or the obese volunteers.
Conclusion: We show a difference in ?-MSH and AgRP in lean and obese subjects that correlates closely with body fat at baseline. We demonstrate an increase in plasma AgRP during a 6-day fast in lean individuals that is coincident with a decrease in plasma leptin. This increase in AgRP was not due to weight loss per se as there was no change in AgRP as a result of the same weight loss in the VLCD intervention in lean individuals. The source of the increase in plasma AgRP and its physiological function in the periphery remains to be elucidated but we suggest that the dynamics of the change in plasma leptin may determine the elevation in fasting plasma AgRP in lean subjects.

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Published date: 2004

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Local EPrints ID: 25612
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25612
PURE UUID: 0e1676f3-c994-47e3-9a24-3482a96843a4

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Date deposited: 11 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:04

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Contributors

Author: N. Hoggard
Author: A.M. Johnstone
Author: P. Faber
Author: E.R. Gibney
Author: M. Elia
Author: G. Lobley
Author: V. Rayner
Author: G. Horgan
Author: L. Hunter
Author: S. Bashir
Author: R.J. Stubbs

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