1.A review on gastric leptin: the exocrine secretion of a gastric hormone.
Philippe CAMMISOTTO ; Moise BENDAYAN
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2012;45(1):1-16
A major advance in the understanding of the regulation of food intake has been the discovery of the adipokine leptin a hormone secreted by the adipose tissue. After crossing the blood-brain barrier, leptin reaches its main site of action at the level of the hypothalamic cells where it plays fundamental roles in the control of appetite and in the regulation of energy expenditure. At first considered as a hormone specific to the white adipose tissue, it was rapidly found to be expressed by other tissues. Among these, the gastric mucosa has been demonstrated to secrete large amounts of leptin. Secretion of leptin by the gastric chief cells was found to be an exocrine secretion. Leptin is secreted towards the gastric lumen into the gastric juice. We found that while secretion of leptin by the white adipose tissue is constitutive, secretion by the gastric cells is a regulated one responding very rapidly to secretory stimuli such as food intake. Exocrine-secreted leptin survives the hydrolytic conditions of the gastric juice by forming a complex with its soluble receptor. This soluble receptor is synthesized by the gastric cells and the leptin-leptin receptor complex gets formed at the level of the gastric chief cell secretory granules before being released into the gastric lumen. The leptin-leptin receptor upon resisting the hydrolytic conditions of the gastric juice is channelled, to the duodenum. Transmembrane leptin receptors expressed at the luminal membrane of the duodenal enterocytes interact with the luminal leptin. Leptin is actively transcytosed by the duodenal enterocytes. From the apical membrane it is transferred to the Golgi apparatus where it binds again its soluble receptor. The newly formed leptin-leptin receptor complex is then secreted baso-laterally into the intestinal mucosa to reach the blood capillaries and circulation thus reaching the hypothalamus where its action regulates food intake. Exocrine-secreted gastric leptin participates in the short term regulation of food intake independently from that secreted by the adipose tissue. Adipose tissue leptin on the other hand, regulates in the long term energy storage. Both tissues work in tandem to ensure management of food intake and energy expenditure.
Adipokines
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Adipose Tissue
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Adipose Tissue, White
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Appetite
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Blood-Brain Barrier
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Capillaries
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Chief Cells, Gastric
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Dietary Sucrose
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Duodenum
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Eating
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Energy Metabolism
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Enterocytes
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Gastric Juice
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Gastric Mucosa
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Golgi Apparatus
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Hand
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Hypothalamus
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Intestinal Mucosa
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Leptin
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Membranes
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Phenobarbital
;
Receptors, Leptin
;
Secretory Vesicles
2.Psammomys obesus, a particularly important animal model for the study of the human diabetic nephropathy.
Pnina SCHERZER ; Shachaf KATALAN ; Gay GOT ; Galina PIZOV ; Irene LONDONO ; Anca GAL-MOSCOVICI ; Mordecai M POPOVTZER ; Ehud ZIV ; Moise BENDAYAN
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2011;44(3):176-185
The Psammomys obesus lives in natural desert habitat on low energy (LE) diet, however when maintained in laboratory conditions with high energy (HE) diet it exhibits pathological metabolic changes resembling those of type 2 diabetes. We have evaluated and correlated the histopathology, metabolic and functional renal alterations occurring in the diabetic Psammomys. Renal function determined by measuring glomerular filtration rate (GFR), protein excretion, protein/creatinine ratio and morpho-immunocytochemical evaluations were performed on HE diet diabetic animals and compared to LE diet control animals. The diabetic animals present a 54% increase in GFR after one month of hyperglycemic condition and a decrease of 47% from baseline values after 4 months. Protein excretion in diabetic animals was 5 folds increased after 4 months. Light microscopy showed an increase in glomeruli size in the diabetic Psammomys, and electron microscopy and immunocytochemical quantitative evaluations revealed accumulation of basement membrane material as well as frequent splitting of the glomerular basement membrane. In addition, glycogen-filled Armanni-Ebstein clear cells were found in the distal tubules including the thick ascending limbs of the diabetic animals. These renal complications in the Psammomys, including changes in GFR with massive proteinuria sustained by physiological and histopathological changes, are very similar to the diabetic nephropathy in human. The Psamommys obesus represents therefore a reliable animal model of diabetic nephropathy.
Animals
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Basement Membrane
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Diabetic Nephropathies
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Diet
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Ecosystem
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Evaluation Studies as Topic
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Extremities
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Gerbillinae
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Glomerular Basement Membrane
;
Glomerular Filtration Rate
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Humans
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Light
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Microscopy
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Microscopy, Electron
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Models, Animal
;
Proteinuria