Interactions between temperature and human leptin physiology in vivo and in vitro
Autor: | Annerieke Zeyl, Arthur B. Jenkins, Nigel A.S. Taylor, Jodie M. Stocks |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Leptin Male medicine.medical_specialty Physiology Acclimatization Cold exposure Biology Models Biological Body Temperature Heart Rate In vivo Physiology (medical) Internal medicine Immersion medicine Cold acclimation Humans Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Secretion Temperature Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health General Medicine Adaptation Physiological In vitro Cold Temperature Incubation temperature Endocrinology Adipose Tissue Body Composition Subcutaneous adipose tissue Energy Metabolism Skin Temperature Algorithms |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Applied Physiology. 92 |
ISSN: | 1439-6327 1439-6319 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00421-004-1084-7 |
Popis: | To investigate the possibility that environmental temperature may exert physiologically significant direct, local effects on subcutaneous adipose tissue temperatures, and its secretion of leptin, we exposed healthy males ( n=12) to repeated cold-water immersion (study 1), and also incubated surgically removed human subcutaneous adipose tissue samples ( n=7) at 27 degrees, 32 degrees and 37 degrees C (study 2). In vivo immersions were conducted over 15 days (60-90 min at 18 degrees C). Regional body temperatures and plasma leptin concentrations were measured before and during immersion. Acute cold exposure suppressed plasma leptin concentration (25 min: -14%, 60 min: -22%, P=0.0001), whilst repeated cold-water immersion was associated with an increase of plasma leptin concentration relative to test day 1 (+19% day 8, +13% day 15, overall P=0.03). Leptin secretion in vitro decreased 3.7-fold as the incubation temperature decreased from 37 degrees to 27 degrees C ( P=0.001). In a compartmental model of leptin turnover in vivo, the measured (local) temperature effect on leptin secretion in vitro was more than able to account for the observed cold-induced decrease in leptin concentration in vivo. We therefore conclude that acute and repeated cold-water immersions have separate and opposing effects on circulating leptin concentrations in humans. Under our experimental conditions, the local effects of reduced subcutaneous adipose tissue temperature may be a more important contributor to the acute effects observed in vivo, than the sympathetically mediated suppression of leptin secretion. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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