Leptin and Anorexia
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I have, off and on, entered into discussions with other bloggers on the role of leptin in long-term energy storage. Leptin, we know, is strongly related to long-term storage of fat and is probably one of the primary hormones associated with obesity (Kelesidis, 2006). It is thought, along with ghrelin, to be one of the hormones responsible for appetite.

One question I've posed is does leptin have an antagonist hormone? Most hormones have complements that act to oppose their action. For example, insulin versus glucagon/growth hormone. As an aside, please recall that growth hormone is primarily a catabolic hormone that turns on the body's fat metabolism, a state we call fasted. Generally an antagonist allows the endocrine system to respond more rapidly than simply waiting for the pertinent hormone's concentration in the blood to clear. Does leptin need an antagonist? Or does it operate over such a long time-span that it normally wouldn't need one? Is the lack of an (apparent) antagonist perhaps one of the reasons leptin metabolism can go screwy?

As an alternative to looking into why leptin makes people fat, I thought it might be interesting to examine how a lack of leptin makes people skinny, or anorexic. Anorexia just means 'skinny' refers to a lack of appetite in medical parlance, while anorexia nervosa (AN) refers specifically to the eating disorder that we've all heard about in the news. People can have abnormally low-body fat without having an eating disorder. For example, individuals with cortisol insufficiency (such as Addison's disease, an autoimmune condition involving destruction of the adrenal cortex) tend to have very low body fat levels, but not necessarily a lack of lean body mass. The lack of cortisol just mutes the body's stress response to store an emergency reserve of fat.

One of the markers that characterizes anorexia nervosa is low circulating leptin levels.

Now, leptin likes to interface with the hypothalamus, which is the part of your brain that essentially acts as an interface between the digital-fast (neural) and analogue-slow (endocrine) control systems of the human body. Lot's of things like to interface with the hypothalamus though, so please do not take this role of leptin as dogma. Together, the hypothalamus and pituitary are the master endocrine organ system, regulating the serum concentration of most of the hormones in your body. Essentially it integrates many different signals, and based on those signals decides what quantity of eight primary hormones to release (i.e. oxytocin, argigine vassopressin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, growth-hormone, thyrotropin (TSH), prolactin, luteinizing hormone, and follicle-stimulating hormone). The hypothalamus plays a crucial role in regulating immune function, metabolism, sex function, and mood/anxiety amongst many others.

The hypothalamus (and the pituitary by extension) tends to release hormones in pulses. When I say the hypothalamus exists on the border between digital and analogue that is nearly literally true. The hypothalamus samples the blood-stream for various feedback mechanisms (i.e. hormones) and when it adds together enough signals that indicate the system needs more growth hormone, it generates a pulse. This is done by the combination of neural and endocrine tissues. Leptin is one of the signals that contributes to whether or not pulses are released from the hypothalamus. If everyone's leptin receptor cells are identical, which is not likely, then low leptin levels will probably down-regulate some of the hypothalamic-pituitary hormones and up-regulate some others, while high leptin levels will do the opposite.

One very common side-effect of AN is the loss of the menstrual cycle (which has the scientific name amenorrhea) The menstrual cycle is initiated by a luteinizing hormone pulse, which implies that very low leptin levels have effects beyond simply regulating fat levels. This is not a surprising result; we would expect the body to shut down non-essential functions when it is starving. This result is correlated to circulating leptin levels (Blüher, 2007). Blüher has some interesting comments on the matter of leptin release:
Leptin secretion can be stimulated by insulin, glucocorticoids (RM: cortisol), and cytokines (RM: immune system catnip) (i.e. tumor necrosis factor [alpha]), whereas catecholamines (RM: "adrenaline"), free fatty acids, cold exposure and thyroid hormones inhibit leptin release [18,19]. Estrogens induce leptin production whereas androgens (RM: male sex hormones) suppress it, providing an explanation for the sexual dimorphism in serum leptin levels [19]. Although anthropometric and clinical features (gender, fat mass/fat distribution, hormones and cytokines) may influence the secretion pattern of leptin, the crucial factor in regulating serum leptin levels seems to be caloric intake and the amount of energy stored in adipocytes [5].
Another side-effect of AN is increased activity (aka hyperactivity), which is a homeostatic method to increase caloric expenditure. This is called activity-based anorexia (ABA) and is one of the primary animal models of anorexia. A review by Hillebrand et al. (2008) shows that leptin itself appears to be signaling the hypothalamus to encourage the brain to engage in this sort of behaviour, and that leptin-replacement therapy suppressed this activity. It's been hypothesized that hyperactivity would promote foraging behaviour in the paleolithic-era and in wild animals. Leptin also has a role in the homeostatic mechanisms behind thermogenesis via the basal metabolism of the thyroid hormones and brown adipose tissue (Rogers, 2009).

This result begs the question, are obese individuals sedentary because they have high circulating leptin levels? Was Gary Taubes, of Good Calories, Bad Calories fame, right in the lack of a relationship between exercise and obesity, even if he didn't know why? If so, hyper/hypoactivity as it relates to leptin would appear to be a case of positive feedback, where the signal tends to reinforce itself over time. It's only because gathering food requires so little energy investment today (get off couch, walk to pantry, grab chips) that this positive feedback cycle blows up so spectacularly. Historically putting on some fat might discourage activity via leptin, giving the organism a rest period.

Now on another front, anorexia nervosa patients who recover from the condition and regain body weight often regain too much and become overweight. This occurred even when caloric-intake and leptin levels were monitored during the body weight gain period to prevent excessive weight gain (Lob, 2003). So once again we see the dominance of the endocrine system and homeostasis over counting calories.

What might cause this higher than normal set-point of body mass index (BMI)? This question does not seem to have a firm answer quite yet so I'm going to speculate. The hypothalamus is a union of neural and endocrine tissue. Neurons, in particular, are quite plastic in that the amount of stimulus you have to apply to get them to fire changes depending on their exposure history. This is how memory is thought to work, for example. My hypothesis is that the neural component of the hypothalamus habituates to long-term leptin exposure.

There are clearly some threshold levels where leptin indicates an organism is in semi-starvation mode and generates compensatory behaviour (Müller, 2009). I can postulate that there may also be hibernation morphology at the top-end of the leptin spectrum. If the organism stays in semi-starvation mode for long enough, perhaps the sensitivity to leptin in the hypothalamus is reduced by the plasticity of the neural component. In this case, a crash weight-gain diet would not give the hypothalamus's neurons sufficient time to change their sensitivity to leptin, and adapt a new set point.

Maybe this is the reason why fast weight-loss programs typically fail miserably. The leptin set points for semi-starvation modes are at at abnormal levels, and pushing leptin through them induces behaviour that likely results in a rebound. The solution then is to be patient and go slow with weight loss or gain. If my hypothesis is correct, losing weight too fast may actually permanently distort leptin regulation.

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