Revisão Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Uncoupling Metabolism and Coupling Leptin to Cardiovascular Disease

2002; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 22; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1161/01.atv.0000023181.54279.fe

ISSN

1524-4636

Autores

Allyn L. Mark, William I. Sivitz,

Tópico(s)

Adipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases

Resumo

HomeArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular BiologyVol. 22, No. 6Uncoupling Metabolism and Coupling Leptin to Cardiovascular Disease Free AccessEditorialPDF/EPUBAboutView PDFView EPUBSections ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload citationsTrack citationsPermissions ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyReddit Jump toFree AccessEditorialPDF/EPUBUncoupling Metabolism and Coupling Leptin to Cardiovascular Disease Allyn L. Mark and William I. Sivitz Allyn L. MarkAllyn L. Mark From the Hypertension Genetics Specialized Center of Research, Cardiovascular Center, Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Center, and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa; Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine; and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Iowa City. and William I. SivitzWilliam I. Sivitz From the Hypertension Genetics Specialized Center of Research, Cardiovascular Center, Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Center, and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa; Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine; and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Iowa City. Originally published1 Jun 2002https://doi.org/10.1161/01.ATV.0000023181.54279.FEArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2002;22:881–883In the past eight years, beginning with the discovery of leptin, 1 there has been an avalanche of knowledge and a conceptual revolution in understanding the regulation of body fat. Central to this revolution has been the recognition that adipose tissue is a tremendously active and important endocrine and paracrine tissue. In this regard, adipose tissue is to the last decade what the endothelium was to the previous decade—a large tissue previously relatively ignored that was found with a single discovery to be of great interest and importance.See page 961The interest in leptin focused initially on appetite, metabolism, and adiposity, but there is mounting evidence that leptin participates in sympathetic and arterial pressure regulation and in vascular biology.Leptin increases sympathetic nerve activity2 to thermogenic brown adipose tissue through a central neural action. This is not surprising, but leptin also increases sympathetic activity to the kidney and extremities.2 This sympathoexcitatory action would be expected to increase arterial pressure.Of perhaps greater interest to the readers of this Journal is the mounting evidence that the arterial wall is a target of leptin action. The signaling form of the leptin receptor was initially said to be expressed only in the hypothalamus, but we now know that it is also expressed in peripheral tissues.For example, the long, signaling form of the leptin receptor is expressed in endothelial cells.3,4 Lembo et al3 and Vecchione et al5 reported that leptin stimulates increases in endothelial NO synthesis.Leptin promotes accumulation of reactive oxygen species in human umbilical vascular endothelial cells (HUVECs).6,7 It upregulates endothelin-1 production in HUVECs.8 It promotes angiogenesis.4,9 And an astonishing finding: Parhami et al10 demonstrated that leptin regulates osteoblastic differentiation and enhances the calcification of vascular cells.Platelets also express the leptin receptor,11 and leptin potentiates platelet aggregation through a novel leptin receptor–dependent mechanism.11,12 Through this mechanism, leptin is prothrombotic. Leptin deficient ob/ob mice have delayed and unstable thrombus formation after arterial injury.12,13 Leptin normalizes this phenotype.So leptin, like insulin, has emerged as a metabolic hormone that contributes importantly to regulation of vascular biology (Table). Table 1. Cardiovascular Actions of Leptin• Increases endothelial NO synthesis3,5• Promotes accumulation of reactive oxygen species6,7• Upregulates endothelin-1 in endothelial cells8• Promotes angiogenesis4,9• Enhances calcification of vascular cells10• Potentiates platelet aggregation and thrombus formation11–13• Simulates sympathetic nerve activity2We return to the arterial pressure effects of leptin, which is a focus of the study by Bernal-Mzrachi et al14 in this issue of Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. Given that leptin produces both pressor (sympathetic activation) and depressor (increased NO) actions, the integrated actions of leptin on arterial pressure are not predictable. Acutely, leptin does not consistently increase arterial pressure,2 but chronic infusion of leptin increases arterial pressure in rats despite weight loss, which would be expected to lower arterial pressure.15 In addition, transgenic mice overexpressing leptin have significantly higher arterial pressure than wild-type control mice despite decreases in body fat.16 These increases in arterial pressure are accompanied by increased urinary norepinephrine and are normalized after acute alpha adrenergic or ganglionic blockade.16 These observations suggest an integrated sympathetically mediated pressor response to leptin. There are, however, some observations that do not support a pressor effect of leptin. For example, Zhang et al17 recently reported that moderate hyperleptinemia produced by adenoviral gene transfer to obese mice decreased body weight but did not produce an increase in arterial pressure. Nevertheless, pharmacologic15 and transgenic16 models support a pressor action of leptin.Leptin-deficient, obese ob/ob mice have slightly lower arterial pressure than their wild-type controls despite profound obesity that would be expected to increase arterial pressure.18 Administration of leptin to the ob/ob mice (so-called leptin reconstitution) increases arterial pressure despite decreases in food intake and body weight.16 This suggests a physiological role for leptin in arterial pressure regulation.In contrast to the leptin-deficient ob/ob mice, agouti yellow obese mice have partial leptin resistance, compensatory hyperleptinemia, and elevated arterial pressure.18 There is evidence that the elevated leptin contributes to the increase in arterial pressure.16This brings us to further discussion of the manuscript by Bernal-Mizrachi et al14 from Semenkovich's laboratory in this issue of the Journal.Uncoupling proteins cause energy derived from metabolism of food to be dissipated as heat rather than stored as high-energy phosphates. Uncoupling protein-1 (UCP-1) is normally expressed only in brown adipose tissue where it regulates thermogenic metabolism. A recent study by Li et al19 from Semenkovich's laboratory demonstrated that transgenic overexpression of mitochondrial UCP-1 in skeletal muscle increased skeletal muscle oxygen consumption (metabolic rate) without altering food intake. This was accompanied by weight loss, increased insulin sensitivity, and resistance to high-fat diet–induced obesity. Transgenic overexpression of human UCP-3 in skeletal muscle also promoted weight loss despite hyperphagia.20 These studies suggested that enhancing respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle could potentially reduce obesity and its metabolic sequelae.In the present study, Bernal-Mizrachi et al14 again report that transgenic overexpression of UCP-1 in skeletal muscle of agouti yellow obese mice increased metabolism, promoted weight loss, and increased insulin sensitivity. The major new finding was that skeletal muscle overexpression of UCP-1 decreased arterial pressure, serum leptin, and urinary catecholamines. In the transgenic agouti mice overexpressing UCP-1, superimposed administration of leptin increased arterial pressure. This was not observed with leptin administration in the nontransgenic agouti obese mice. Based on this constellation of findings, Bernal-Mizrachi et al14 conclude that "skeletal muscle respiratory uncoupling lowers blood pressure through a leptin-dependent mechanism and prevents insulin resistance in genetic obesity."The study by Bernal-Mirzrach et al14 is admirable and provides novel information and provocative conclusions. As with many studies in a rapidly evolving field, it also prompts questions.First, is the arterial pressure–lowering effect of UCP-1 overexpression in skeletal muscle greater than that observed with a comparable decrease in adipose tissue and body weight produced by other means? In other words, is there a specific arterial pressure–lowering action of UCP-1 expression independent of weight loss? These are cogent questions because the manuscript implies that increasing respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle is producing a specific effect that might not be observed with other forms of weight loss.Second, although the data may be consistent with the concept that skeletal muscle respiratory uncoupling lowers arterial pressure through a leptin-dependent mechanism, the data do not establish a persuasive cause and effect relationship. For example, UCP-1 uncoupling also improved insulin sensitivity, raising the possibility that this could have contributed to the lowering of arterial pressure. A key experiment in testing the role of alterations in leptin in the arterial pressure–lowering effect of UCP-1 overexpression would be to study the effect of UCP-1 overexpression in leptin-deficient ob/ob or leptin-resistant db/db mice, both of which completely lack leptin action.Third, Bernal-Mizrachi et al,14 Li et al,19 and Clapham et al20 suggested that promoting respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle represents a potential treatment for obesity and its sequelae. In the current article,14 the authors offer "the notion that respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle mimics chronic vigorous exercise, " which promotes weight loss and decreases in arterial pressure. However, there are two reports that chronic exercise training decreases UCP-3 expression in skeletal muscle in humans21 and rodents.22 This decrease in UCP-3 in skeletal muscle could preserve coupled respiration to generate high-energy phosphates for muscle performance. Conversely, extreme overexpression of uncoupling proteins in skeletal muscle could deplete high-energy phosphates and impair muscle performance. Therefore, as previously emphasized by Li et al,19 treating obesity in humans by promoting respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle will be feasible only if it is possible to produce levels that protect against weight gain without compromising muscle performance.This study heightens interest in the role of skeletal muscle uncoupling proteins in regulation of adiposity and its cardiovascular consequences, and it suggests a potential role for overexpression of skeletal muscle uncoupling protein in the treatment of obesity and related hypertension. The therapeutic potential is speculative, but any advance in understanding the biology and potential therapy of obesity merits consideration today. We are witnessing a frightening epidemic of obesity produced by the omnipresence of food and malignantly sedentary lifestyles. Fortunately, this epidemic has been paralleled in the last decade by a revolution in understanding of the genetics and biology of obesity. The therapeutic dividends have not yet accrued, but we predict that just as discovery of the renin-angiotensin system, adrenergic receptors, and calcium channels led to safe, effective therapy for essential hypertension, so will the discovery of the pathways and mechanisms regulating appetite and metabolism lead inevitably to safe, effective therapy for obesity and its adverse consequences. The emerging evidence for vascular actions of leptin indicates that the advancing avalanche of information on the new biology of obesity merits the attention of vascular biologists.FootnotesCorrespondence to Allyn L. Mark, Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, 218 CMAB, Iowa City, IA 52242-1101. E-mail [email protected] References 1 Zhang Y, Proenca R, Maffei M, Barone M, Leopold L, Friedman JM. Positional cloning of the mouse obese gene and its human homologue. Nature (Lond). 1994; 372: 425–432.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar2 Haynes WG, Morgan DA, Walsh SA, Mark AL, Sivitz WI. Receptor mediated regional sympathetic nerve activation by leptin. J Clin Invest. 1997; 100: 270–278.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar3 Lembo G, Vecchione C, Fratta L, Marino G, Trimarco V, d'Amati G, Trimarco B. Leptin induces direct vasodilation through distinct endothelial mechanisms. Diabetes. 2000; 49: 293–297.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar4 Sierra-Honigmann MR, Nath AK, Murakami C, Garcia-Cardena G, Papapetropoulos A, Sessa WC, Madge LA, Schechner JS, Schwabb MB, Polverini PJ, Flores-Riveros JR. Biological action of leptin as an angiogenic factor. Science. 1998; 281: 1683–1686.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar5 Vecchione C, Maffei A, Colella S, Aretini A, Poulet R, Frati G, Gentile MT, Fratta L, Trimarco V, Trimarco B, Lembo G. Leptin effect on endothelial nitric oxide is mediated through Akt-endothelial nitric oxide synthase phosphorylation pathway. Diabetes. 2000; 51: 168–173.Google Scholar6 Bouloumie A, Marumo T, Lafontan M, Busse R. Leptin induces oxidative stress in human endothelial cells. FASEB J. 1999; 13: 1231–1238.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar7 Yamagishi S, Edelstein D, Du X, Kaneda Y, Guzman M, Brownlee M. Leptin induces mitochondrial superoxide production and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 expression in aortic endothelial cells by increasing fatty acid oxidation via protein kinase A. J Biol Chem. 2001; 276: 25096–25100.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar8 Quehenberger P, Exner M, Sunder-Plassmann R, Ruzicka K, Bieglmayer C, Endler G, Muellner C, Speiser W, Wagner O. Leptin induces endothelin-1 in endothelial cells in vitro. Circ Res. 2002; 90: 711–718.LinkGoogle Scholar9 Bouloumie A, Drexler HCA, Lafontan M, Busse R. Leptin, the product of Ob gene, promotes angiogenesis. Circ Res. 1998; 83: 1059–1066.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar10 Parhami F, Tintut Y, Ballard A, Fogelman AM, Demer LL. Leptin enhances the calcification of vascular cells: artery wall as a target of leptin. Circ Res. 2001; 88: 954–960.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar11 Nakata M, Tada T, Soejima N, Maruyama I. Leptin promotes aggregation of human platelets via the long form of its receptor. Diabetes. 1999; 48: 426–429.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar12 Konstantinides S, Schafer K, Koschnick S, Loskutoff DJ. Leptin-dependent platelet aggregation and arterial thrombosis suggests a mechanism for atherothrombotic disease in obesity. J Clin Invest. 2001; 08: 1533–1540.Google Scholar13 Bodary PF, Westrick RJ, Wickenheiser KJ, Shen Y, Eitzman DT. Effect of leptin on arterial thrombosis following vascular injury in mice. JAMA. 2002; 287: 1706–1709.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar14 Bernal-Mizrachi C, Weng S, Bing L, Nolte LA, Feng C, Coleman T, Holloszy JO, Semenkovich CF. Respiratory uncoupling lowers blood pressure through a leptin-dependent mechanism in genetically obese mice. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2002; 22: 961–968.LinkGoogle Scholar15 Shek EW, Brands MW, Hall JE. Chronic leptin infusion increases arterial pressure. Hypertension. 1998; 31: 409–414.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar16 Aizawa-Abe M, Ogawa Y, Masuzaki H, Ebihara K, Satoh N, Iwai H, Matsuoka N, Hayashi T, Hosoda K, Inoue G, Yoshimasa Y, Nakao K. Pathophysiological role of leptin in obesity-related hypertension. J Clin Invest. 2000; 105: 1243–1252.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar17 Zhang W, Telemaque-Potts S, Anderson PR, Wang Z, An J, Newgard CB, Victor RG. Adenoviral leptin as gene therapy for obesity related hypertension. Am J Hypertens. 2002; 15: 1A. Abstract.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar18 Mark AL, Shaffer RA, Correia MLG, Morgan DA, Sigmund CD, Haynes WG. Contrasting blood pressure effects of obesity in leptin-deficient ob/ob mice and agouti yellow obese mice. J Hypertens. 1999; 17: 1949–1953.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar19 Li B, Nolte LA, Ju J-S, Han DH, Coleman T, Holloszy JO, Semenkovich CF. Skeletal muscle respiratory uncoupling prevents diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance in mice. Nat Med. 2000; 6: 1115–1120.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar20 Clapham JC, Arch JR, Chapman H, Haynes A, Lister C, Moore GB, Piercy V, Carter SA, Lehner I, Smith SA, Beeley LJ, Godden RJ, Herrity N, Skehel M, Changani KK, Hockings PD, Reid DG, Squires SM, Hatcher J, Trail B, Latcham J, Rastan S, Harper AJ, Cadenas S, Buckingham JA, Brand MD, Abuin A. Mice overexpressing human uncoupling protein-3 in skeletal muscle are hyperphagic and lean. Nature. 2000; 406: 415–418.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar21 Schrauwen P, Troost FJ, Ravussin E, Saris WH. Skeletal muscle UCP2 and UCP3 expression in trained and untrained male subjects. Int J Obes. 1999; 23: 966–972.CrossrefGoogle Scholar22 Boss O, Samec S, Desplanches D, Mayet MH, Seydoux J, Muzzin P, Giacobino JP. Effect of endurance exercise training on mRNA expression of uncoupling proteins 1, 2 and 3 in the rat. FASEB J. 1998; 12: 335–339.CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar Previous Back to top Next FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsCited By Fessel J, Flynn C, Robinson L, Penner N, Gladson S, Kang C, Wasserman D, Hemnes A and West J (2013) Hyperoxia Synergizes with Mutant Bone Morphogenic Protein Receptor 2 to Cause Metabolic Stress, Oxidant Injury, and Pulmonary Hypertension, American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, 10.1165/rcmb.2012-0463OC, 49:5, (778-787), Online publication date: 1-Nov-2013. Ketsawatsomkron P, Stepp D and de Chantemèle E (2013) PTP1B in Obesity-Related Cardiovascular Function Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Control of Metabolism, 10.1007/978-1-4614-7855-3_7, (129-145), . 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