Diabetes, Vol 46, Issue 7 1159-1166, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
Voluntary wheel running decreases adipose tissue mass and expression of leptin mRNA in Osborne-Mendel rats
JJ Zachwieja, SL Hendry, SR Smith and RB Harris
Exercise and Nutrition Program, Pennington Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge 70808, USA. zachwijj@mhs.pbrc.edu
The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of voluntary wheel
running on the expression of leptin mRNA in rats that are either sensitive
(OM) or resistant (S5B/Pl) to diet-induced obesity. Male OM and S5B/Pl rats
had ad libitum access to standard rodent diet and water. At 3-5 weeks of
age, animals of both strains were randomly assigned to either an exercise
or sedentary control group. The exercise groups had 24-h access to a
running wheel, and they trained for 7 weeks. During weeks 1-4, animals in
both OM and S5B/Pl exercise groups progressively increased their running.
During weeks 5-7, S5B/Pl exercisers tended to run more than did OM
(approximately 60 vs. 45 km/week), but by the end of the study both groups
had an equally greater heart weight (mg/g body weight) and planteris
citrate synthase activity than their sedentary controls. Oral glucose
tolerance tests performed during the last week of training revealed that
compared with their appropriate controls, insulin sensitivity was enhanced
(P < 0.05) in OM but not in the S5B/Pl wheel-running groups. Inguinal,
epididymal, and retroperitoneal fat pads weighed less in the running than
in the nonrunning groups of both strains (P < 0.01). Additionally,
exercised animals had an increased percentage of smaller cells (40-60
microm; P < 0.05) and a decreased percentage of larger cells (120-160
microm; P < 0.05) in the epididymal fat depot. Epididymal leptin mRNA
measured by Northern blot analysis was reduced in the exercise-trained rats
of both strains (P < 0.05). Furthermore, serum leptin was reduced in
exercise-trained compared with the control animals of both strains. In
comparison to S5B/Pl, control OM animals exhibited both a higher expression
and higher circulating levels of leptin (P < 0.05). While serum leptin
levels were decreased and food intake was increased in the exercise-trained
animals of both strains (P < 0.05), the exact relationship between
exercise, leptin, and food intake in this rat model of dietary obesity
remains to be determined. Nonetheless, these results suggest that the
expression and secretion of leptin can be influenced by exercise training
and that these changes (i.e., reduced expression and secretion of protein)
can occur independently of changes in whole-body insulin sensitivity and
susceptibility to diet-induced obesity.